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The dual brain theory claims that the two cerebral hemispheres of the brain may sense and react to the environment independently from one another and that as a result of emotionally traumatic experience, one half may dominate the other in order to reduce the traumatized hemisphere's exposure.
This theory is not the same as the split-brain theory, but it is an extension of it.
History
[edit]Anatomy of a Dual Brain
[edit]Structure
[edit]Functions
[edit]Disease Treatment
[edit]Epilepsy
[edit]Dual Brain and Psychology
[edit]Double Brain Personality
[edit]Social Functionality
[edit]How Thinking Changes
[edit]Learning
[edit]This study focuses on cognitive development with dual brain theory. [1]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Application of Dual Brain Theory to Cross-Cultural Studies of Cognitive Development and Education, Warren D. Tenhouten, Sociological Perspectives , Vol. 32, No. 2 (Summer, 1989), pp. 153-167.