Brain, Vol. 109, No. 2, 357-369, 1986
© 1986 Oxford University Press
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SUBCORTICAL COORDINATION OF HEMISPHERE ACTIVITY IN COMMISSUROTOMIZED PATIENTS
McGill University, Montreal Canada
Correspondence to:
Correspondence to Dr Justine Sergent, Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Montreal Neurological Institute, 3801 University Street, Montreal PQ H3A 2B4. Canada
Despite their commissurotomy, split-brain patients behave as unified individuals and seldom display signs of hesitation and dissociation in their activities Yet our current understanding of the callosal disconnection syndrome suggests that the two isolated hemispheres cannot work in parallel and that only one hemisphere at a time is responsive to bilateral stimulation. To examine this divergence, the two hemispheres of complete forebrain commissurotomy patients were simultaneously presented with colour stimuli associated with opposite responses, and the patients had to produce a single finger response whose accuracy depended on their capacity to resolve the conflicting information Although the two patients differed in their efficiency, they were capable of accurate performance in the bilateral conflict condition, but could not correctly cross-compare the information received by each hemisphere This performance suggests that the two disconnected hemispheres can work in parallel and process the incoming information efficiently The outcome of these hemispheric operations may be integrated in subcortical centrencephalic areas that coordinate the activities of the two sides of the brain and maintain some unity within cerebral structures
Received March 19, 1985. Revised August 6, 1985. Accepted August 16, 1985.
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