@article{oai:kanazawa-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00013368, author = {Shima, Hiroshi and Hasegawa, Mitsuhiro and Tachibana, Osamu and Nomura, Motohiro and Yamashita, Junkoh and Ozaki, Yuzo and Kawai, Jun and Higuchi, Masanori and Kado, Hisashi}, issue = {12}, journal = {NeuroReport}, month = {Aug}, note = {To investigate whether the ocular dominance affects laterality in the activity of the primary visual cortex, we examined the relationship between the ocular dominance and latency or dipole moment measured by checkerboard-pattern and magnetoencephalography in 11 right-handed healthy male participants. Participants with left-eye dominance showed a dipole moment of 21.5±6.1 nAm with left-eye stimulation and 16.1±3.6 nAm with right, whereas those with right-eye dominance showed a dipole moment of 18.0±5.2 and 21.5±2.7 nAm with left-eye and right-eye stimulation of the infero-medial quadrant visual field, respectively. Thus, the dipole moment was higher when the dominant eye was stimulated, which implies that ocular dominance is regulated by the ipsilateral occipital lobe. © 2010 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins., 横浜栄共済病院脳卒中診療科・脳神経外科}, pages = {817--821}, title = {Ocular dominance affects magnitude of dipole moment: An MEG study}, volume = {21}, year = {2010} }