| Literature DB >> 23738006 |
Margriet A Groen1, Andrew J O Whitehouse, Nicholas A Badcock, Dorothy V M Bishop.
Abstract
It has been known for many years that hand preference is associated with cerebral lateralisation for language, but the relationship is weak and indirect. It has been suggested that quantitative measures of differential hand skill or reaching preference may provide more valid measures than traditional inventories, but to date these have not been validated against direct measures of cerebral lateralisation. We investigated the associations of three different handedness assessments; 1) a hand preference inventory, 2) a measure of relative hand skill, and 3) performance on a reaching task; with cerebral lateralisation for language function as derived from functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound during a language production task, in a group of 57 typically developing children aged from 6 to 16 years. Significant correlations between cerebral lateralisation for language production and handedness were found for a short version of the inventory and for performance on the reaching task. However, confidence intervals for the correlations overlapped and no one measure emerged as clearly superior to the others. The best handedness measures accounted for only 8-16% of the variance in cerebral lateralisation. These findings indicate that researchers should not rely on handedness as an indicator of cerebral lateralisation for language. They also imply that lateralisation of language and motor functions in the human brain show considerable independence from one another.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23738006 PMCID: PMC3667815 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0064876
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Descriptive statistics.
|
|
|
| Range | |
| Cerebral lateralisation for language production | 2.00 | 3.20 | 2.95 | −6.31–7.77 |
| Edinburgh Handedness Inventory | 63.57 | 44.53 | 77.78 | −77.78–100.00 |
| Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (short) | 73.52 | 46.29 | 100.00 | −100.00–100.00 |
| Peg-moving task | 4.65 | 5.67 | 4.66 | −8.02–14.30 |
| Quantification of Hand Preference task | .26 | .23 | .31 | −.50–.50 |
Crosstabulation of participants’ cerebral lateralisation for language, based on LIs and 95% confidence intervals, as a function of handedness as derived from the full Edinburgh Handedness Inventory. Participant numbers are presented, with proportion of participants within each handedness category in parentheses.
| Language | Handedness | |
| Other | Right | |
| Other | 6 (50) | 7 (16) |
| Left | 6 (50) | 38 (84) |
Non-parametric correlations, Spearman’s rho, between cerebral lateralisation for language production and different handedness measures for the full sample (n = 57) are presented in the cells above the diagonal; the 95% confidence intervals of the correlations are in the cells below the diagonal.
| 1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | |
| 1. Cerebral lateralisation for language | − | .16 | .29 | .13 | .40 |
| 2. Edinburgh Handedness Inventory | −.11–.41 | − | .72 | .20 | .18 |
| 3. Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (short) | .02–.52 | .57–.83 | − | .28 | .24∧ |
| 4. Peg-moving task | −.14–.38 | −.07–.44 | .01–.51 | − | .19 |
| 5. Quantification of Hand Preference task | .15–.60 | −.09–.43 | −.03–.48 | −.08–.43 | − |
∧p<.1;
p<.05;
p<.01.
Figure 1Associations between hand preference measures and cerebral lateralisation for language production.
Scatterplots of performance on the short version of the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (top right panel), Peg-moving task (lower left panel), and Quantification of Hand Preference task (QHP; lower right panel) on the y-axis and cerebral lateralisation for language production as indicated by the lateralisation index (LI) as derived from functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound (fTCD) on the x-axis.