The right cerebral hemisphere of the brain is primarily involved in processing spatial and visual information, as well as understanding context and non-verbal communication. It plays a crucial role in creativity, intuition, and emotional regulation. Additionally, the right hemisphere is associated with the recognition of faces and interpreting emotions, making it essential for social interactions. Overall, it complements the functions of the left hemisphere, which is more focused on analytical and verbal tasks.
Cerebral hemispheres (left and right)
The right cerebral hemisphere controls the left side of the body. This is the creative side of the brain.
Cerebral specialization is the communication of the right and left side of the cerebral area of the brain. Different sections of the brain also communicate with each other.
left
the right cerebral cortex
corrus collasum
Cerebral dominance is also related to handedness--whether a person has a strong preference for the use of their right or left hand.
The right temporal lobe is on the right half of the brain near the Sagittal plane that divides left and right cerebral hemispheres.
The left cerebral hemisphere is typically superior in language processing, logic, and analytical thinking compared to the right hemisphere. It is also often dominant for right-hand motor control in the majority of individuals.
Since there are two cerebral hemispheres, and also two hands (in a normal person) it works out very neatly; each side of the brain controls one hand. The left cerebral hemisphere controls the right hand, and the right cerebral hemisphere controls the left hand.
There is one major fissure that divides the cerebral hemispheres, called the longitudinal fissure. It separates the left and right hemispheres of the brain.
corpus callosum