Journal Details
Laterality
Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition
17% more pages in 2010!
2009 Impact Factor now 1.514 up from 0.812 in 2008 (2010 Thomson Reuters, 2009 JCR)
Published By: Psychology Press
Volume Number: 15
Frequency: 6 issues per year
Print ISSN: 1357-650X
Online ISSN: 1464-0678
Special Issues
Changes in Emotion Lateralisation throughout Childhood
Guest editors: Dr Victoria J. Bourne (University of Dundee), Dr Dawn Watling (Royal Holloway, University of London) and Dr Lance Workman (Bath Spa University)
With the emergence of interdisciplinary fields such as social, developmental, and affective neuroscience an increasing amount of research now examines the way in which brain-behaviour interactions develop. This special issue brings together current research that examines this interaction specifically in relation to the processing of emotion. The way in which emotion is lateralised in the brain has received a great deal of attention, with two primary and contrasting hypotheses proposed: the right hemisphere hypothesis and the valence hypothesis. Examining the way in which emotion lateralisation develops will advance our understanding of the relationship between brain development and social interaction.
Submission to this special issue has now closed.
Guest editors: Dr Victoria J. Bourne (University of Dundee), Dr Dawn Watling (Royal Holloway, University of London) and Dr Lance Workman (Bath Spa University)
With the emergence of interdisciplinary fields such as social, developmental, and affective neuroscience an increasing amount of research now examines the way in which brain-behaviour interactions develop. This special issue brings together current research that examines this interaction specifically in relation to the processing of emotion. The way in which emotion is lateralised in the brain has received a great deal of attention, with two primary and contrasting hypotheses proposed: the right hemisphere hypothesis and the valence hypothesis. Examining the way in which emotion lateralisation develops will advance our understanding of the relationship between brain development and social interaction.
Submission to this special issue has now closed.
