Search Results - "Hamilton, Charles R"

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    Inversion effect for faces in split-brain monkeys by Vermeire, Betty A, Hamilton, Charles R

    Published in Neuropsychologia (01-10-1998)
    “…Inverting facial stimuli disrupts recognition in human subjects more severely than does inversion of other objects normally seen upright. Furthermore, this…”
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    Journal Article
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    Right-Hemispheric Superiority in Split-Brain Monkeys for Learning and Remembering Facial Discriminations by Vermeire, Betty A, Hamilton, Charles R, Erdmann, Anne L

    Published in Behavioral neuroscience (01-10-1998)
    “…Twenty-six split-brain rhesus monkeys learned and remembered 8 go/no-go discriminations of monkey faces significantly better with the right hemisphere than…”
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    Journal Article
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    Complementary Hemispheric Specialization in Monkeys by Hamilton, Charles R., Vermeire, Betty A.

    “…Twenty-five split-brain monkeys were taught to discriminate two types of visual stimuli that engage lateralized cerebral processing in human subjects…”
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    Journal Article
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    Effects of Facial Identity, Facial Expression, and Subject's Sex on Laterality in Monkeys by Vermeire, Betty A., Hamilton, Charles R.

    Published in Laterality (Hove) (01-01-1998)
    “…Previously we showed that rhesus monkeys processed discriminations of monkey faces significantly better with the right hemisphere of the brain than with the…”
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    Journal Article
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    Lateralization for orientation in split-brain monkeys by Hamilton, C R

    Published in Behavioural brain research (01-12-1983)
    “…Split-brain monkeys learned with each cerebral hemisphere to discriminate lines differing in slope by 15 degrees. This type of spatial discrimination is…”
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    Journal Article
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    Repercussions of violence in the films of Clint Eastwood: The changing paradigm by Hamilton, Charles R

    Published 01-01-2013
    “…This dissertation shows how Clint Eastwood, as actor and director, uses cinematic techniques and violence to emphasize the repercussions of violence and its…”
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    Dissertation
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    Visual Discrimination of Movement: Midbrain or Forebrain? by Hamilton, Charles R., Lund, Jennifer S.

    “…Monkeys whose optic chiasm and forebrain commissures had been sectioned and control monkeys with only the optic chiasm cut were tested for interocular transfer…”
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    Journal Article
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