Table of contents
- 1. Introduction to Psychology1h 43m
- 2. Psychology Research2h 20m
- 3. Biological Psychology2h 41m
- 4. Sensation and Perception28m
- 5. Consciousness and Sleep32m
- 6. Learning41m
- 7. Memory34m
- 8. Cognition37m
- 9. Emotion and Motivation35m
- 10. Developmental Psychology33m
- 11. Personality48m
- 12. Social Psychology41m
- 13. Stress and Health41m
- 14. Psychological Disorders44m
- 15. Treatment47m
3. Biological Psychology
The Cortical Forebrain
Struggling with Psychology?
Join thousands of students who trust us to help them ace their exams!Watch the first videoMultiple Choice
The most accurate thing to say about brain lateralization is that
A
people are either left brained or right brained.
B
people are whole brained.
C
global or holistic processing occurs mostly in the left hemisphere.
D
no information is processed in the left hemisphere.

1
Understand the concept of brain lateralization: Brain lateralization refers to the tendency for some neural functions or cognitive processes to be more dominant in one hemisphere than the other.
Recognize the myth of being 'left-brained' or 'right-brained': This is a common misconception. While certain functions may be more dominant in one hemisphere, both hemispheres work together in a complementary manner.
Identify the role of each hemisphere: The left hemisphere is often associated with logical reasoning, language, and analytical tasks, while the right hemisphere is linked to creativity, spatial ability, and holistic processing.
Acknowledge the concept of 'whole-brained' processing: This means that both hemispheres are involved in most cognitive tasks, and they communicate through the corpus callosum to integrate information.
Clarify the statement about global or holistic processing: While the right hemisphere is more involved in holistic processing, it is incorrect to say that it occurs mostly in the left hemisphere. Both hemispheres contribute to processing information in a global context.
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