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Left-handedness has been connected to many different conditions,
traits, and abilities. This is especially true for pathological
syndromes, such as schizophrenia, along with learning disabilities
and autism. The published research on handedness is vast and
frequently contradictory, often raising more questions than
providing answers. Questions such as: Is handedness genetic? Can
handedness be changed? Are there consequences to training someone
to switch handedness? Are there positive traits associated with
left-handedness like creativity? Are there negative traits
associated with left-handedness like trouble reading maps? Is it
abnormal to do some things right-handed and other things
left-handed? Are the brains of left-handers different from the
brains of right-handers? Laterality: Exploring the Enigma of
Left-Handedness examines the research conducted over the past 50
years with special emphasis on twenty-first century research on
handedness and translates this literature into an accessible and
readable form. Each chapter is based on a question or questions
covering diverse topics such as genetic and biological origins of
handedness, familial and hormonal influences on handedness, and the
effects of a majority right-handed world on the behaviors of
left-handers.
Lateral preferences are strange, puzzling, and on the surface, not
particularly adaptive aspects of behavior. Why one chooses
habitually to write or to brush the teeth with the right hand,
while a friend or family member habitually uses the left hand,
might be interesting enough to elicit some conversation over dinner
or a drink, but certainly does not seem to warrant serious
scientific study. Yet when one looks at human behaviors more
carefully, one becomes aware that asymmet rical behaviors favoring
one side or the other are actually a fairly universal
characteristic of human beings. In the same way that we are right
or left handed, we are also right or left footed, eyed, and eared.
As a species, we are quite lopsided in our behavioral
coordinations; furthermore, the vast majority of us are right
sided. Considering that we are looking at a sizable number of
behaviors, and at a set of biases that seem to be systematic and
show a predictable skew in the popUlation, the problem takes on
greater significance. The most obvious form of lateral preference
is, of course, handedness. When studying behavioral asymmetries,
this is the issue with which most investigators start. Actually, we
entered this research area through a much different route. Around
1971 we became interested in the problem of eye dominance or eye
preference. This is a behavior where the input to one eye seems to
be preferred over that to the other in certain binocular viewing
situations."
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