Turning the other lobe: : Directional biases in brain diagrams
Past research shows that in drawn or photographic portraits, people are significantly more likely to be posed facing to their right than their left. We examined whether the same type of bias exists among sagittal images of the human brain. An exhaustive search of Google images using the term 'brain sagittal view' yielded 425 images of a left or right facing brain. The direction of each image was coded and revealed that 80% of the brains were right-facing. This bias was present in images that did not contain any representation of a human head. It is argued that the effect might be aesthetic in nature, the result of the Western tradition of reading left to right or due to the facial factors that underlie the bias previously found in portraits.
Item Type | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords | Body perception; Cognition; Face perception; Perception |
Subjects |
Psychology(all) > Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Neuroscience(all) > Sensory Systems Computer Science(all) > Artificial Intelligence |
Divisions |
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Date Deposited | 18 Nov 2024 11:48 |
Last Modified | 18 Nov 2024 11:48 |