Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T20:02:11.922Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Primate handedness: The other theory, the other hand and the other attitude

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2011

Peter F. MacNeilage
Affiliation:
Departments of Linguistics and Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712
Michael G. Studdert-Kennedy
Affiliation:
Haskins Laboratories and Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06510
Bjorn Lindblom
Affiliation:
Department of Linguistics, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Author's Response
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Annett, M. (1972) The distribution of manual asymmetry. British Journal of Psychology 63:343–58. [MA]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Annett, M. (1975) Hand preference and the laterality of cerebral speech. Cortex 11:305–38. [MA]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Annett, M. (1978) A single gene explanation of right- and left-handedness and brainedness. Lanchester Polytechnic. [MA]Google Scholar
Annett, M. (1979) Family handedness in three generations predicted by the right shift theory. Annals of Human Genetics 42:479–91. [MA]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Annett, M. (1985) Left, right, hand and brain: The right shift theory. Erlbaum Associates. [MA, PFM]Google Scholar
Annett, M. & Manning, M. (1989) The disadvantages of dextrality for intelligence. British Journal of Psychology 80:213–66.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Annett, J., Annett, M., Hudson, P. T. W. & Turner, A. (1979) The control of movement in the preferred and nonpreferred hands. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 31:641–52. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ashton, G. C. (1982) Handedness: An alternative hypothesis. Behavior Genetics 12:125–47. [MA]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beck, C. H. M. & Barton, R. L. (1972) Deviation and laterality of hand preference in monkeys. Cortex 8:339–63. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Benton, A. L., Varney, N. R. & Hamsher, K. De S. (1978) Lateral differences in tactile direction perception. Neuropsychologia 16:109–14. [DE]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Box, H. O. (1977) Observations on spontaneous hand use in the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus). Primates 18:395400. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradshaw, J. L., Bradshaw, J. A. & Nettleton, N. C. (1988) Movement initiation and control: Abduction, adduction and locus of limb. Neuropsychologia 26:701–9. [DE]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryden, M. P. & Steenhuis, R. E. (1989) Different dimensions of hand preference relate to skilled and unskilled activities. Cortex 25:289304. [PFM]Google Scholar
Carnahan, H. & Elliott, D. (1987) Pedal asymmetry in the reproduction of spatial locations. Cortex 23:157–59. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chamberlain, H. D. (1928) The inheritance of left handedness. Journal of Heredity 19:557–59. [MA]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapman, J. P., Chapman, L. J. & Allen, J. J. (1987) The measurement of foot preference. Neuropsychologia 25:579–84. [MA]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Conrad, K. (1949) UŪber aphasisiche Sprachstōrungen bei Hirnverletzten Linkshānder. Nervenarzt 20:148–54. [MA]Google Scholar
Corballis, M. C. (1987) Straw monkeys. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:269–70. [MA]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corballis, M. C. (1989) Laterality and human evolution. Psychological Review 96:492505. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ettlinger, G. (1961) Lateral preferences in monkeys. Behaviour 17:275–87. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagot, J., Drea, C. & Wallen, K. (in press) Asymmetrical hand use in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatto) in tactually and visually regulated tasks. Journal of Comparative Psychology. [PFM]Google Scholar
Fagot, J. & Vauclair, J. (1988a) Handedness and manual specialization in the baboon. Neuropsychologia 26:795804. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fagot, J. (1988b) Handedness and bimanual coordination in the lowland gorilla. Brain, Behavior, and Evolution 32:8995. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fischer, R. B., Mennier, G. F. & White, P. J. (1982) Evidence of laterality in the lowland gorilla. Perceptual and Motor Skills 54:1093–94. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisk, J. D. & Goodale, M. A. (1985) The organization of eye and limb movements during unrestricted reaching to targets in contralateral and ipsilateral visual space. Experimental Brain Research 60:159–78. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fitts, P. M. (1954) The information capacity of the human motor system in controlling the amplitude of movement. Journal of Experimental Psychology 47:381–91. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Flowers, K. (1975) Handedness and controlled movement. British Journal of Psychology 66:3952. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Forsythe, C. & Ward, J. P. (1988) Black lemur (Lemur macaco) hand preference in food reaching. Primates 29:7577. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forsythe, C., Milliken, G. W., Stafford, D. K. & Ward, J. P. (1988) Posturally related variations in the hand preferences of the ruffed lemur (Varecia variegata variegata). Journal of Comparative Psychology 102:248–50. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Geschwind, N. (1985) Implications for evolution, genetics and clinical syndromes. In: Cerebral lateralization in nonhuman species, ed. Glick, S. D.. Academic Press. [PFM]Google Scholar
Gloning, K. & Quatember, R. (1966) Statistical evidence of neuropsychological syndromes in left-handed and ambidextrous people. Cortex 2:484–88. [MA]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodale, M. A. (1987) Two hemispheres: One reaching hand. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:275–76. [DE, PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guiard, Y., Diaz, G. & Beaubaton, D. (1983) Left hand advantage in right handers for spatial constant error: Preliminary evidence in a unimanual ballistic aimed movement. Neuropsychologia 21:111–15. [DE, PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Healey, J. M., Liederman, J. & Geschwind, N. (1986) Handedness is not a unidimensional trait. Cortex 22:33–54. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hécaen, H. & Ajuriaguerra, J. (1964) Left handedness: Manual superiority and cerebral dominance. Grune & Stratton. [MA]Google Scholar
Heestand, J. E. (1986) Behavioral lateralization in four species of apes. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Washington. [PFM]Google Scholar
Heuer, H. (1987) Does a hand preference indicate a hemispheric specialization? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:277–78. [MA]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honda, H. (1982) Rightward superiority of eye movements in a bimanual aiming task. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 34A:499513. [DE]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Honda, H. (1984) Functional between-hand differences and outflow eye position information. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 36A:7588.[DE]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hopkins, W. D., Washburn, D. A. & Rumbaugh, D. M. (1989) A note on hand use in the manipulation of joysticks by two rhesus monkeys and three chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Journal of Comparative Psychology 103:91–94. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howell, N. (1979) Demography of the Dobe !Kung. Academic Press. [PFM]Google Scholar
Isaac, G. (1978) Food sharing and human evolution: archaeological evidence from the Plio-Pleistocene of East Africa. Journal of Anthropological Research 34:311–25. [MH]Google Scholar
Itani, J. (1957) Personality of Japanese monkeys. Iden 11:29–3. (in Japanese). [PFM]Google Scholar
Keele, S. W. (1981) Behavioral analysis of movement. In: Handbook of physiology: Section 1: The nervous system, vol. 2, Motor control, Part 2., ed. Brooks, V. B.. American Physiological Society. [DE]Google Scholar
Kimura, D. (1983) Speech representation in an unbiased sample of left handers. Human Neurobiology 2:147–54. [PFM]Google Scholar
King, J. E. & Landau, V. (in preparation) Manual preferences in varieties of reaching in squirrel monkeys. In: New evidence of primate behavioral asymmetries, ed. Ward, J.. [PFM]Google Scholar
Kuhl, P. K. (1988) On handedness in primates and human infants. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11:739–41. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, W. A. (1980) Anticipatory control of postural and task muscles during rapid arm flexion. Journal of Motor Behavior 12:185–96. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
MacKenzie, C. L., Sivak, B. & Elliott, D. (1989) Manual localization of lateralized visual targets. Journal of Motor Behavior 20:443–57. [DE]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacNeilage, P. F. (in press) The postural origins theory of neurobiological asymmetries in primates. In: The Biological Foundations of Language Development, ed. Krasnegor, N., Rumbaugh, D., Studdert-Kennedy, M. G. & Schiefelbusch, R.. Lawrence Erlbaum. [PFM]Google Scholar
MacNeilage, P. F., Studdert-Kennedy, M. G. & Lindbloom, B. (1987) Primate handedness reconsidered. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:247303. [MH]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacNeilage, P. F., Studdert-Kennedy, M. G. & Lindblom, B. (1988) Primate handedness: A foot in the door. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11:737–44. [MA, PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maki, S. (1990) An experimental approach to the postural origins theory of neurobiological asymmetries in primates. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. [PFM]Google Scholar
McGee, M. G. & Cozad, T. (1980) Population genetic analysis of human hand preference: Evidence for generation differences, familial resemblance and maternal effects. Behavior Genetics 10:263–75. [MA]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Milliken, G. W., Forsythe, C. & Ward, J. P. (1989) Multiple measures of hand use lateralization in the Ring-Tailed Lemur (Lemur catta). Journal of Comparative Psychology 103:262–68. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Milner, A. D. (1969) Distribution of hand preferences in monkeys. Neuropsychologia 7:375–77. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Napier, J. R. & Napier, P. H. (1985) The Natural History of the Primates M.I.T. Press. [PFM]Google Scholar
Newcombe, F. & Ratcliff, G. G. (1973) Handedness, speech lateralization and ability. Neuropsychologia 11:399–407. [MA]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Olson, D. A., Branch, J. E. & Nadler, R. D. (1990) Hand preferences on captive gorillas, orangutans and gibbons. American Journal of Primatology 20:83–94. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peters, M. (1980) Why the preferred hand taps more quickly than the non-preferred hand: Three experiments on handedness. Canadian Journal of Psychology 34:62–71. [DE]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peters, M. (1988) Footedness: Asymmetries in foot preference and skill and neuropsychological assessment of foot movement. Psychological Bulletin 103:179–92. [MA]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peters, M. & Durding, B. M. (1979) Footedness of left and right handers. American Journal of Psychology 92:133–42. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Post, D. G., Hausfater, G. & McCuskey, S. A. (1980) Feeding behavior of yellow baboons (Papio cynocephalus): Relationship to age, gender and dominance rank. Folia Primatologia 34:170–95. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Preilowski, B. (1979) Performance differences between hands and lack of transfer of finger posture and sensory-motor skill in intact rhesus monkeys: Possible model of the origin of cerebral asymmetry. Neuroscience Letters, Supplement 3, 589. [PFM]Google Scholar
Ramaley, F. (1913) Inheritance ofleft-handedness. The American Naturalist 47:730–38. [MA]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rawlins, M. G. (in press). Locomotive and manipulative use of the hand in the Cayo Santiago macaques (Macaca mulatta). In: The primate hand, ed. Preuschoft, H. & Chivers, D.. II Sedicesimo. [MH]Google Scholar
Rife, D. C. (1940) Handedness with special reference to twins. Genetics 5:178–86. [MA]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roy, E. A. (1983) Manual performance asymmetries and motor control processes: Subject-generated changes and response parameters. Human Movement Science 2:271–77. [DE]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roy, E. A. & Elliott, E. A. (1986) Manual asymmetries in visually directed aiming. Canadian Journal of Psychology 40:109–21. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roy, E. A (1989) Manual asymmetries in aimed movements. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 41A:501–16. [DE]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roy, E. A. & MacKenzie, C. L. (1978) Handedness effects in kinesthetic spatial location judgements. Cortex 14:250–58. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sanford, C., Gum, K. & Ward, J. P., (1984) Posture and laterality in the bushbaby. Brain Behavior and Evolution 25:217–24. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schaller, G. B. (1963) The Mountain Gorilla. Chicago University Press. [PFM]Google Scholar
Searleman, A. (1980) Subject variables and cerebral organization for language. Cortex 16:239–54. [PFM, MA]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shafer, D. D. (1987) Patterns of hand preference among captive gorillas. M.A. thesis, San Francisco State University. [PFM]Google Scholar
Simon, T. J. & Sussman, H. M. (1987) The dual task paradigm: Speech dominance or manual dominance. Neuropsychologia 25:559–69. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Spiegler, B. J. & Yeni-Komshian, G. H. (1983) Incidences of left handed writing in a college population with reference to family patterns of hand preference. Neuropsychologia 21:651–59. [MA]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Subramoniam, S. (1957) Some observations on the habits of the slender loris, Loris tardigradus L. Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 54:386–98. [PFM]Google Scholar
Todor, J. I. & Cisneros, J. (1985) Accommodation to increased accuracy demands by the right and left hands. Journal of Motor Behavior 17:355–72. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Todor, J. I. & Doane, T. (1978) Handedness and hemispheric asymmetry in the control of movements. Journal of Motor Behavior 10:295–300. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Todor, J. I. & Smiley, A. (1985) Manual asymmetries in motor control. In: Advances in psychology vol. 23, Neuropsychological studies of apraxia and related disorders, ed. Roy, E. A.. North Holland. [DE]Google Scholar
Trankell, A. (1955) Aspects of genetics in psychology. American Journal of Human Genetics 7:264–76. [MA]Google ScholarPubMed
Verfaellie, M., Bowers, D. & Heilman, K. M. (1988) Hemispheric asymmetries mediating intention but not selective attention. Neuropsychologia 26:521–31. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walker, S. (1988) Language, handedness, and the larynx. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11:731–32. [MA]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ward, J. P. (in press) Prosimians as animal models in the study of neural lateralization. In: Cerebral lateralization: Theory and Research: The Toledo Symposium, ed. Kitterle, F. L.. [PFM]Google Scholar
Ward, J. P., Milliken, G. W., Dodson, D. L., Stafford, D. K. & Wallace, M. (1990) Handedness as a function of sex and age in a large population of lemur. Journal of Comparative Psychology 104:167–73. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warren, J. M. (1977) Handedness and cerebral dominance in monkeys. In: Lateralization in the nervous system, ed. Harnad, S., Doty, R. W., Jaynes, J., Goldstein, L., & Krauthamer, G.. Academic Press. [PFM]Google Scholar
Watanabe, K. & Kawai, M. (in preparation) Lateralized hand use observed in the precultural behavior of the Koshima monkeys (Macaca fuscata) In: New Evidence of Primate Behavioral Asymmetries, ed. Ward, J. P.. [PFM]Google Scholar
Watson, N. V. & Kimura, D. (1989) Right hand superiority for throwing but not for interception. Neuropsychologia 7:1399–1414. [PFM]CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Webster 's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary (1971) C. & G. Merriam Company. [PFM]Google Scholar
Witelson, S. F. (1974) Hemispheric specialization for linguistic and nonlinguistic tactual perception using a dichotomous stimulation technique. Cortex 10:3–17. [DE]CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Woodworth, R. S. (1899) The accuracy of voluntary movement. Psychological Review 3:(supplement 2, whole). [DE]Google Scholar