Sixteen right-handed male students were administered
a unilateral lexical decision task in 4 conditions: a baseline
condition and three sound conditions. In the sound conditions,
the participants listened to noise, to music with a positive
emotional valence, and to music with a negative emotional
valence, while performing the visual half-field task. In
the baseline condition, the noise condition, and the positive
music condition, lexical decision latencies were shorter
to right than to left visual field presentations. In the
negative music condition, there was a selective enhancement
of left visual field performance, which cancelled the visual
field advantage completely. None of the concurrent sounds
affected autonomic arousal as measured by heart rate. The
results demonstrated that music with a negative emotional
valence can alter the half-field asymmetry of a verbal
task. The outcome was discussed in terms of right hemisphere
priming due to negative emotional experience. (JINS,
1997, 3, 473–479.)