The halves are neither mirror images nor contain completely exclusive functions. However there are significant similarities. Each half receive sensory information though, curiously, from the opposite side of the body. Thus the right eye goes to the left brain and vice versa. The exception is the nose: the right nostril goes to the right brain.
I thought this was very widely known—which I say not in order to make you feel bad (there’s no shame in not knowing things) but to suggest why Viliam didn’t find it necessary to provide references when he said that each hemisphere gets input from both eyes’ view of one half of the visual field.
Or take a look at this diagram from a book about the visual field. Or this online book.
Thanks.
but to suggest why Viliam didn’t find it necessary to provide references when he said that each hemisphere gets input from both eyes’ view of one half of the visual field.
I don’t ask for reference to claim that it was wrong for Viliam that he didn’t provide references. I rather ask because the belief I had in my mind conflict. Likely because sources like the ChangingMinds website making a wrong claim (if I take your link to be trustworthy).
But if it’s the visual field that’s link that doesn’t raise my basic confidence in the claim that hypnosis focuses on a single hemisphere. Timeline therapy would be a good example. Some people orient their timeline in a way that if you ask them to visualize an event that happend in the past it will be on the left side and if you ask them to imagine an event of the future it will be on the right side.
Different people have a different spatial layout for this but it generally doesn’t happen that someone visualize both his past and future in the same direction.
Generally entities accessed by hypnosis do have a location and there are effects of moving that location around but they are not all located to one side, and if I would meet a person for whom everything is on one side I would hypnotize that the person has a pathology.
I’m personally wary of drawing strong conclusions about underlying neuroscience when thinking about hypnosis, particularly because I’m exposed to hypnotists talking about neuroscience who might have access to empiric experience of what hypnosis does but who don’t have real neurosicence knowledge.
I can’t quickly find a source for each hemisphere receiving only a part of the visual field, but the optical nerves coming from each eye cross before reaching the brain, so it’s not “one eye, one hemisphere”. (That doesn’t mean “the left one goes right and vice versa”, but “they join, and then they split again”.)
I can’t quickly find a source for each hemisphere receiving only a part of the visual field, but the optical nerves coming from each eye cross before reaching the brain
The nerves cross in the ChangingMind descriptions. That’s how the left eye surplies the right hemisphere and vice versa. I don’t see how they join in the sense of sharing information while the cross.
Where did you get that idea? A quick googling gives me http://changingminds.org/explanations/brain/parts_brain/left_right_brain.htm:
Skeptics question : http://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/32988/does-the-right-eye-feed-information-to-the-left-brain-hemisphere-while-the-left
If you look e.g. at the start of the Wikipedia article on the visual cortex you will find:
Or take a look at this diagram from a book about the visual field. Or this online book.
I thought this was very widely known—which I say not in order to make you feel bad (there’s no shame in not knowing things) but to suggest why Viliam didn’t find it necessary to provide references when he said that each hemisphere gets input from both eyes’ view of one half of the visual field.
Thanks.
I don’t ask for reference to claim that it was wrong for Viliam that he didn’t provide references. I rather ask because the belief I had in my mind conflict. Likely because sources like the ChangingMinds website making a wrong claim (if I take your link to be trustworthy).
But if it’s the visual field that’s link that doesn’t raise my basic confidence in the claim that hypnosis focuses on a single hemisphere. Timeline therapy would be a good example. Some people orient their timeline in a way that if you ask them to visualize an event that happend in the past it will be on the left side and if you ask them to imagine an event of the future it will be on the right side.
Different people have a different spatial layout for this but it generally doesn’t happen that someone visualize both his past and future in the same direction. Generally entities accessed by hypnosis do have a location and there are effects of moving that location around but they are not all located to one side, and if I would meet a person for whom everything is on one side I would hypnotize that the person has a pathology.
I’m personally wary of drawing strong conclusions about underlying neuroscience when thinking about hypnosis, particularly because I’m exposed to hypnotists talking about neuroscience who might have access to empiric experience of what hypnosis does but who don’t have real neurosicence knowledge.
I can’t quickly find a source for each hemisphere receiving only a part of the visual field, but the optical nerves coming from each eye cross before reaching the brain, so it’s not “one eye, one hemisphere”. (That doesn’t mean “the left one goes right and vice versa”, but “they join, and then they split again”.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optic_nerve
The nerves cross in the ChangingMind descriptions. That’s how the left eye surplies the right hemisphere and vice versa. I don’t see how they join in the sense of sharing information while the cross.