Kovyazina M.S., Roshchina E.I. (2014) Methods of dichotic listening as a research methodology for hemispheric interaction. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 8(2), 64-72.
Experimental data was obtained from a dichotic listening test by patients with unilateral
brain lesions and corpus callosum pathology (agenesis, cysts, degenerative changes, etc).
Efficiency index analysis shows that interhemispheric interaction in the audioverbal sphere
depends to a greater extent on the right hemisphere state. The dichotic listening technique
is not an informative means of studying hemispheric interaction, since it does not allow a
clear distinction between hemispheric symptoms and symptoms of pathology of the corpus
callosum. Thus, violations of hemispheric relations caused by disorders of the corpus callosum
and cerebral hemispheres change worth more right hemisphere activity.
Tous Ral J.M., Liutsko L. (2014) Human errors: their psychophysical bases and the Proprioceptive Diagnosis of Temperament and Character (DP-TC) as a tool for measuring. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 8(2), 48-63.
Human error is commonly differentiated into three different types. These are: errors in perception, errors in decision and errors in sensation. This analysis is based on classical psychophysics (Fechner, 1860) and describes the errors of detection and perception. Decision- making errors are evaluated in terms of the theory of signal detection (McNicholson, 1974), and errors of sensation or sensitivity are evaluated in terms of proprioceptive information (van Beers, 2001).
Each of these stages developed its own method of evaluation that has influenced the development of ergonomics in the event of errors in perception and the verbal assessment of personality (stress, impulsiveness, burnout, etc.) in decision-making errors. Here we represent the method we have developed, the Proprioceptive Diagnosis of Temperament and Character (DP- TC) test, for the specific assessment of errors of perception or expressivity which are based on fine motor precision performance.
Each of the described errors types are interdependent of each other in such a manner
that observable stress in behaviour may be caused due to: the inadequate performance
of a task due to the perception of the person (i.e. from right to left for a right-handed
person); performing a task that requires attentive decision-making to be performed too
hastily; undertaking a task that does not correspond to the prevailing disposition of the
person.