Recognition of Japanese kanji in the left and right visual fields

[1]  M. Mishkin,et al.  Word recognition as a function of retinal locus. , 1952, Journal of experimental psychology.

[2]  M. Bryden Tachistoscopic recognition, handedness, and cerebral dominance☆ , 1965 .

[3]  D. Kimura Dual functional asymmetry of the brain in visual perception , 1966 .

[4]  M. Bryden Left-Right Differences in Tachistoscopic Recognition: Directional Scanning or Cerebral Dominance? , 1966, Perceptual and motor skills.

[5]  E. Zurif,et al.  Familial handedness and left-right differences in auditory and visual perception , 1969 .

[6]  D. Kimura,et al.  Spatial localization in left and right visual fields. , 1969, Canadian journal of psychology.

[7]  O Fujimura,et al.  Selective impairment of phonetic and non-phonetic transcription of words in Japanese aphasic patients: kana vs. kanji in visual recognition and writing. , 1971, Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior.

[8]  G. Bruder,et al.  Effects of familiarity and sequence length of analog matches in the simultaneous matching task , 1974 .

[9]  Sumiko Sasanuma,et al.  Kana and kanji processing in japanese aphasics , 1975, Brain and Language.

[10]  Atsushi Yamadori,et al.  Central (Or Conduction) Aphasia in a Japanese Patient , 1975, Cortex.

[11]  T. Hatta Asynchrony of Lateral Onset as a Factor in Difference in Visual Field , 1976, Perceptual and motor skills.

[12]  Sumiko Sasanuma,et al.  Tachistoscopic recognition of kana and kanji words , 1977, Neuropsychologia.

[13]  T. Hatta,et al.  CONCRETENESS, HIEROGLYPHICITY AND FAMILIARITY OF KANJI (JAPANESE FORM OF CHINESE CHARACTERS) , 1977 .