| Literature DB >> 30738569 |
Konstantina Margiotoudi1, Damien Marie1, Nicolas Claidière1, Olivier Coulon2, Muriel Roth2, Bruno Nazarian2, Romain Lacoste3, William D Hopkins4, Sandra Molesti5, Pauline Fresnais1, Jean-Luc Anton2, Adrien Meguerditchian6.
Abstract
Handedness, one of the most prominent expressions of laterality, has been historically considered unique to human. This noteworthy feature relates to contralateral inter-hemispheric asymmetries in the motor hand area following the mid-portion of the central sulcus. However, within an evolutionary approach, it remains debatable whether hand preferences in nonhuman primates are associated with similar patterns of hemispheric specialization. In the present study conducted in Old world monkeys, we investigate anatomical asymmetries of the central sulcus in a sample of 86 olive baboons (Papio anubis) from in vivo T1 anatomical magnetic resonance images (MRI). Out of this sample, 35 individuals were classified as right-handed and 28 as left-handed according to their hand use responses elicited by a bimanual coordinated tube task. Here we report that the direction and degree of hand preference (left or right), as measured by this manual task, relates to and correlates with contralateral hemispheric sulcus depth asymmetry, within a mid-portion of the central sulcus. This neuroanatomical manifestation of handedness in baboons located in a region, which may correspond to the motor hand area, questions the phylogenetic origins of human handedness that may date back to their common ancestor, 25-40 millions years ago.Entities:
Keywords: Asymmetries; Baboons; Central sulcus; Handedness; Hemispheric specialization
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30738569 DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2019.01.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cortex ISSN: 0010-9452 Impact factor: 4.027