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The cerebral hemisphere forms one half of a brain. Humans (and many other types of animals) have a brain divided into two hemispheres. Each hemisphere is a mirror image of the other and has an outer layer of gray matter called the cerebral cortex.
Neurologists also recognize two additional areas of the cerebral cortex:
In most people, the left hemisphere of the human brain dominates, and specialises (in very broad terms) in speech, writing, language and calculation. The right hemisphere has equivalent broad associations with spatial abilities, coherent form recognition, visual face recognition and some aspects of music perception and production. (corpus callosum, a very large bundle of nerve fibers, and also by other smaller commissures, including the Vilayanur S. Ramachandran; Reith Lectures 2003.