Hemisphere Subdominant

The subdominant hemisphere is one of the two hemispheres of the cerebrum, which in most people is on the right. This hemisphere is not as active as the dominant one and is not as involved in various tasks. However, this does not mean that the subdominant hemisphere is less important or less developed. On the contrary, it may be more flexible and adaptive than the dominant hemisphere.

One of the key advantages of the subdominant hemisphere is its ability to process information from several sources simultaneously. This allows a person to quickly switch between tasks and adapt to changing conditions. Additionally, the subdominant hemisphere may be more creative and innovative than the dominant hemisphere.

However, there are also some disadvantages. The subdominant hemisphere may be less efficient at performing tasks that require high concentration and precision. It may also be less analytical and logical than the dominant hemisphere.



Subdominant hemisphere **(Right)** - the cerebral hemisphere located directly above the dominant **left** and opposite to it. Despite the fact that in most people it usually loses in activity to the dominant left, especially in the neocortex, which is the main place for processing operational information and the formation of “naive” concepts, its activity significantly exceeds activity of the left in non-phoreptic states, that is, when a person is asleep or in an absent-minded state without concentrating on a specific object. The right hemisphere is involved in processing several types of auditory information: music and environmental sound, as well as the ability to produce spatial representations of auditory objects, their features and problems in perception. Moreover, the dominant and subdominant are known as male and female respectively, which are distributed in such a way that in many human genders, the left side of the body is dominant and the right side is subdominant.