How Left-Right Brain Handoffs Happen Without a Hitch

People experience a smooth and seamless visual world despite information quickly being transferred back and forth between both hemispheres of the brain. To accomplish this, each side of the brain needs to “hand off” information to the other half.
How Left-Right Brain Handoffs Happen Without a Hitch
"A car in your rearview mirror that moves from one lane to the other doesn't suddenly disappear and then reappear on the other side," says Edward K. Vogel. "The exchange is smooth, in part, because often the hemispheres coordinate a soft handoff." (Shutterstock*)
5/9/2014
Updated:
5/9/2014

People experience a smooth and seamless visual world despite information quickly being transferred back and forth between both hemispheres of the brain. To accomplish this, each side of the brain needs to “hand off” information to the other half.

Such handoffs are necessary, researchers say, because the human visual system is contralateral—objects on the left side of space are processed by the right hemisphere and vice versa. When objects change sides, the two hemispheres must coordinate so that the tracked object isn’t lost during the exchange.

“Attentional tracking is something we do on a regular basis when driving in traffic or walking through a crowd,” says Edward K. Vogel, professor of psychology at University of Oregon. “Our world is dynamic. We’re moving. Our eyes are moving. Objects are moving. We need to use our attention to follow objects of interest as they move so that we can predict where they are going.

“A car in your rearview mirror that moves from one lane to the other doesn’t suddenly disappear and then reappear on the other side,” he says. “The exchange is smooth, in part, because often the hemispheres coordinate a soft handoff.”

That means, he says, that before the object crosses into the other side of space, the new hemisphere picks it up, and the old hemisphere continues to hang on to it until it crosses well into the other side of space. Both hemispheres grab hold of the object during the exchange—much like in a relay race when two runners both briefly have hold of the baton to assure it isn’t dropped.

To get a closer look at how this exchange happens, Vogel and colleagues used electroencephalogram (EEG) to measure brainwaves from healthy young adults. The research may eventually help scientists better understand individual differences in people’s visual tracking abilities.

Some people, for instance, have trouble picking up a moving vehicle seen in a rearview mirror once it enters a blind spot, Vogel says.

“This new technique allows us to watch the brain as information about a target is handed off from one side to the other, and it may provide insights into why attention is so limited.”

The National Institutes of Health, the Office of Naval Research, and the National Geospatial Agency funded the research, which was published online in the journal Current Biology.

Source: University of Oregon. Republished from Futurity.org under Creative Commons License 3.0.

*Image of “brain“ via Shutterstock