| Literature DB >> 23546932 |
Hélène Cochet1, Richard W Byrne.
Abstract
Variation in methods and measures, resulting in past dispute over the existence of population handedness in nonhuman great apes, has impeded progress into the origins of human right-handedness and how it relates to the human hallmark of language. Pooling evidence from behavioral studies, neuroimaging and neuroanatomy, we evaluate data on manual and cerebral laterality in humans and other apes engaged in a range of manipulative tasks and in gestural communication. A simplistic human/animal partition is no longer tenable, and we review four (nonexclusive) possible drivers for the origin of population-level right-handedness: skilled manipulative activity, as in tool use; communicative gestures; organizational complexity of action, in particular hierarchical structure; and the role of intentionality in goal-directed action. Fully testing these hypotheses will require developmental and evolutionary evidence as well as modern neuroimaging data.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23546932 PMCID: PMC3684717 DOI: 10.1007/s10071-013-0626-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anim Cogn ISSN: 1435-9448 Impact factor: 3.084
Fig. 1Adapted from Vauclair and Cochet (2013). Mean handedness indices for communicative gestures and bimanual manipulation in chimpanzees (Meguerditchian et al. 2010), human infants (Vauclair and Imbault 2009), and human adults (Cochet and Vauclair 2012). The handedness index is calculated using the formula (R − L)/(R + L), where R and L represent the total number of right- and left-hand responses. It varies from −1 to 1, the positive sign reflecting right-hand preference and the absolute values hand-preference strength