The Human Brain Part 6: The Right Hemisphere

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By Larry R Miller


The right brain hemisphere is always right, though not always correct.

No one is totally right or left brained controlled, but certain characteristics are common to the hemisphere dominance. The right brain hemisphere, or gestalt, is involved with intuition, estimates, is fluid and spontaneous, remembers faces, pictures, postures and voices and has the capacity for simultaneous thinking. It’s the hemisphere that possesses diffuse boundary perception, prefers open-ended thinking, drawing and manipulation, is now oriented, with little sense of time, and prefers to participate instead of spectate. The right hemisphere is associated with feelings and is experience oriented, has a let it happen attitude, is self-activating, looks for similarities as opposed to opposites and is flexible and tolerant.

Areas that reside in the right hemisphere pertain to break, crush and dismantle, eat and eat more (two different sections), worry, forget, cry, ramble (physically and verbally), panic, stare off into space, moan, groan, whine and complain, sleep and self-destruction. So, if you want to eat while staring off into space during periods that you feel self-destructive but go to sleep instead, you know which of your hemispheres is most dominant.

Some of us learn languages and how to read more quickly than others. Hemisphere dominance makes a difference. Right hemisphere dominant people are more likely to comprehend spoken language by matching the acoustic sound patterns to known words. They can easily recognize words but not analyze them or figure out the meanings of new ones. They have a hard time spelling words but can recognize the correct spelling. They are able to comprehend what they read if the topic is familiar or emotionally loaded, but don’t do well with unfamiliar or ho-hum topics. Their poor short-term verbal memory requires that sentences are short and to the point and they have poor analytical skills for convoluted speeches. I’d guess that their eyes would gloss over more quickly during a political speech than a left-brainer.

People who are very right brain dominant don’t do well with rapid speech but can easily match pictures and meanings. They have a difficult time reading or understanding when there is a lot of background noise. They need repetition, familiar words, simple grammar and semantics. If they are in a situation that requires speed-reading or skimming, the end result will contain a high percentage of errors. Speaking and listening vocabulary is much higher than sight (reading) capability and they are able to comprehend the spoken word better than the written. The right brain converts written words directly to meaning where the left brain often changes written words to sound and then to meaning. The implication is: right brain dominance can match two identical pictures or two rhyming words but not a picture with a rhyming word. For instance, it would be difficult or impossible for a young right brain dominant child to match a picture of a “house” with the rhyming word “mouse.”

The right brain handles ambiguity well, often treating it as a paradox, works with probabilities, estimates or degrees where the left brain needs to have absolutes and must know exacts.

Right brain people are good at fixing mechanical things and are better at geometry than algebra. They excel in the physical areas and sports that take balance and hand to eye coordination like skating, windsurfing and juggling. Drawing, painting, making movies, in great depth (all with many images and in great visual depth as opposed to auditory depth), playing games like dungeons and dragons and figuring out jig-saw puzzles, all fall into the realm of the right brain.

If we were to ask a right brain person to look at a flower and then describe it to us they would most likely give information about size, color and the overall view. The left brain person would, in all probability, break the flower down into its individual pieces and then give us a blow by blow description of each and every part and how many of each. If you’d counted the parts and came up with a different amount, the right brainer could deal with the estimates where the left brainer would have to go back and count them.

Two things that straddle the line between both hemispheres are singing and playing video games. This can be a double-edged sword. On one side the person could be more balanced, on the other hand they may not be able to figure out that video games aren’t really life.

ADD (attention deficit disorder) may be exactly that. As parents and grandparents, if we were to give our children more personal attention, the kind they probably are craving from those who they love and look up to the most, maybe they wouldn’t suffer from ADD.

Copyright 2007 Larry R. Miller

No one is totally right or left brained controlled, but certain characteristics are common to the hemisphere dominance. The right brain hemisphere, or gestalt, is involved with intuition, estimates, is fluid and spontaneous, remembers faces, pictures, postures and voices and has the capacity for simultaneous thinking. It’s the hemisphere that possesses diffuse boundary perception, prefers open-ended thinking, drawing and manipulation, is now oriented, with little sense of time, and prefers to participate instead of spectate. The right hemisphere is associated with feelings and is experience oriented, has a let it happen attitude, is self-activating, looks for similarities as opposed to opposites and is flexible and tolerant.

Areas that reside in the right hemisphere pertain to break, crush and dismantle, eat and eat more (two different sections), worry, forget, cry, ramble (physically and verbally), panic, stare off into space, moan, groan, whine and complain, sleep and self-destruction. So, if you want to eat while staring off into space during periods that you feel self-destructive but go to sleep instead, you know which of your hemispheres is most dominant.

Some of us learn languages and how to read more quickly than others. Hemisphere dominance makes a difference. Right hemisphere dominant people are more likely to comprehend spoken language by matching the acoustic sound patterns to known words. They can easily recognize words but not analyze them or figure out the meanings of new ones. They have a hard time spelling words but can recognize the correct spelling. They are able to comprehend what they read if the topic is familiar or emotionally loaded, but don’t do well with unfamiliar or ho-hum topics. Their poor short-term verbal memory requires that sentences are short and to the point and they have poor analytical skills for convoluted speeches. I’d guess that their eyes would gloss over more quickly during a political speech than a left-brainer.

People who are very right brain dominant don’t do well with rapid speech but can easily match pictures and meanings. They have a difficult time reading or understanding when there is a lot of background noise. They need repetition, familiar words, simple grammar and semantics. If they are in a situation that requires speed-reading or skimming, the end result will contain a high percentage of errors. Speaking and listening vocabulary is much higher than sight (reading) capability and they are able to comprehend the spoken word better than the written. The right brain converts written words directly to meaning where the left brain often changes written words to sound and then to meaning. The implication is: right brain dominance can match two identical pictures or two rhyming words but not a picture with a rhyming word. For instance, it would be difficult or impossible for a young right brain dominant child to match a picture of a “house” with the rhyming word “mouse.”

The right brain handles ambiguity well, often treating it as a paradox, works with probabilities, estimates or degrees where the left brain needs to have absolutes and must know exacts.

Right brain people are good at fixing mechanical things and are better at geometry than algebra. They excel in the physical areas and sports that take balance and hand to eye coordination like skating, windsurfing and juggling. Drawing, painting, making movies, in great depth (all with many images and in great visual depth as opposed to auditory depth), playing games like dungeons and dragons and figuring out jig-saw puzzles, all fall into the realm of the right brain.

If we were to ask a right brain person to look at a flower and then describe it to us they would most likely give information about size, color and the overall view. The left brain person would, in all probability, break the flower down into its individual pieces and then give us a blow by blow description of each and every part and how many of each. If you’d counted the parts and came up with a different amount, the right brainer could deal with the estimates where the left brainer would have to go back and count them.

Two things that straddle the line between both hemispheres are singing and playing video games. This can be a double-edged sword. On one side the person could be more balanced, on the other hand they may not be able to figure out that video games aren’t really life.

ADD (attention deficit disorder) may be exactly that. As parents and grandparents, if we were to give our children more personal attention, the kind they probably are craving from those who they love and look up to the most, maybe they wouldn’t suffer from ADD.

Copyright 2007 Larry R. Miller

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risarah  says:
2 years ago

FANTASTIC!! BUT WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF THE MAJORITY OF HUMANS WERE RIGHT BRAINED???

Larry R. Miller  says:
2 years ago

What happens if the majority of humans are left brained??? Using both seems to be the best of both worlds, or maybe both hemispheres is more appropriate. I see the article got posted up twice, was that done by a right or left brain person? Thanks for the read and comment.

Ren  says:
2 years ago

I have always known something was different about me but could never truely define it. I just started a psychology class and when my teacher showed us the chart of how right hemisphere people think it all made scence to me, almost startling. I came directly home and started researching more on the internet. I am a 27 year old male, and I kinda feel like I can finally start to understand myself and why I am the way I am.

Larry R Miller  says:
2 years ago

I can relate. Since grade school, maybe before but I don't remember, I always seemed to be doing, and interested in doing, things that everyone else wasn't. That hasn't changed and I find it doesn't matter. Find out who you are and enjoy your life without trying to follow someone else's path(s).

JakeKnight  says:
2 years ago

Intersting read although I think a bit of it is generalizing towards the extreme ie-we know what side is dominant if we'd like to stare while eating then sleeping before suicide---Silly. Thats just one point that as a Right-mind lefty I seem to contradict. I'm very right brained and have no trouble analyzing a politician or spelling antidisestablishmentarianism. Plus I'm very happy on a day to day basis. I'm sorry for the rant but too much of your very knowledgable assessment of lateralization is bent negatively away from the right brain and in my very humble opinion a little black and white.

Larry R Miller profile image

Larry R Miller  says:
18 months ago

Hi JakeKnight, sorry it took so long for me to answer your post but I was totally engaged in my left brain. I understand how easy for some to spell antidisestablishmentarianism, even if they have trouble with more difficult words like interesting. Interesting that it would be the first word in your comment. Black and white spells simplicity. Did you read the last line, or form your opinion in the first paragraph? Don't be sorry, everyone is entitled to their opinion and there will always be someone else who disagrees.

Heliodoro  says:
13 months ago

The total awakening of the right hemisphere from the frontal right lobe to the occipital right lobe = Samadhi, Nirvana, Satori, Illumination

Absolutely marvelous and a unique experience...

ianasil  says:
10 months ago

I love your last comment to JakeKnight

Spot On!

YazzyH  says:
8 months ago

Hey, I'm 15 and I've kown for the past year or so that I'm Right-Brained or whatever it is. But no offence, your article is pretty in-your-face slight negativeness towards the Right-Brained people. I've done tests before, but I DO know how to spell rather well and have no problem really. The stories I write in school are very creative and imaginative too. I'm kinda confused o_0- or maybe I'm a bit of Left-Brained person too. I've always been different form all the girls at school; I never really minded, and can totally relate too.

Larry  says:
8 months ago

Hi YazzyH, the article is taken from research information. In my articles I translate doctorese into a form that most people can understand. Personally, I'm not negative toward anyone, regardless of brain hemisphere, sex or culture. I hesitate to tell you this, but kown is spelled with two Ns, offence is really spelled "OFFENSE" and being different form other girls in school would be more understandable if you were different "FROM." I encourage you to keep writing, and to use a spell checker. A spell checker won't find words like form where it should be from, that requires good proof reading. You'll find writing is very rewarding, especially if what you write is helpful to others. I have lots of articles on the Internet, and slide shows too. You can access links on our website www.newliferoadmap.com.

M&M  says:
7 months ago

I've started a new job as a Math teacher at a community college. My first class is "Pre-College Algebra" at a decelerated pace. Although my students seem to be very bright, they are struggling (suffering) in my class. I found out yesterday that 5 out of the seven students are left handed. They show many of the characteristics of right brained dominance. I want to learn more about teaching Algebra with a right brained approach. Where do I start?

Hmmm...  says:
4 months ago

Larry,

Are you familiar with the biblical passage about the mote in another's eye? While your left brain was busy combing the negative comments for spelling errors, it forgot to notice the absence of a verb in your response to JakeKnight. That second sentence needs revision.

Larry  says:
4 months ago

Hi, I know, write like that all the time. Isn't it a shame? Maybe I need a different editor. Then again, maybe not. Last month I averaged over 18,000 reads a day on the Internet and in print. Reads fine to me and millions of others yearly, worldwide and since 1982. Was...your brain busy combing my comment for negatives? Got any motes in your eye? Live in a glass house? Know JakeKnight? Ooops, darn left one of them things out again and can't spell either. Have a nice day.

Sara  says:
3 months ago

can someone post a picture

Larry R Miller profile image

Larry R Miller  says:
3 months ago

Hi, M&M I had a reply posted but don't know where it went. Try searching for BrainGym, Touch for Health, EMT (emotional freedom therapy) or educational kynesiology. Larry

Hi Sara, thanks for the read. I hope someone has a picture for you. We're on the road and I won't have access to our library until late November.

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