TY - GEN ID - cogprints1718 UR - http://cogprints.org/1718/ A1 - Zaidel, D. W. A1 - Kosta, A. Y1 - 2001/// N2 - Is there a preferred hemispheric canonical view of a visual concept? We investigated this question in a natural superordinate category membership decision task using a hemi-field paradigm. Participants had to decide whether or not an image of an object lateralized in the left (LVF) or right (RVF) visual half field is a member of a predesignated superordinate category. The objects represented high, medium, or low typicality levels, and each object had 6 different perspective views (front, front-right, front-left, side, back-left, and back-right). The latency responses revealed a significant interaction of Hemi Field X View X Typicality (there was no hemi-field difference in accuracy). The findings confirm the presence of asymmetry in stored concepts in long-term memory and suggest, in addition, a hemispheric canonical view of these concepts, a view strongly related to typicality level. PB - Academic Press KW - typical KW - prototypical KW - prototypicality KW - prototype KW - exemplar KW - instance KW - superordinate categories KW - mental distance KW - conceptual organization KW - concepts KW - hemispheric specialization KW - laterality KW - cerebral dominance KW - priming KW - brain KW - man made KW - natural objects KW - left hemisphere KW - right hemisphere KW - hemi-field KW - latency KW - reaction time KW - perspective view KW - 3-D KW - vision KW - visual. TI - Hemispheric effects of canonical views of category members with known typicality levels SP - 311 AV - public EP - 316 ER -