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Showing 241 to 255 of 348 results Save | Export
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Teixeira, Luis Augusto; Teixeira, Maria Candida Tocci – Brain and Cognition, 2007
The effect of unimanual practice of the non-preferred hand on manual asymmetry and manual preference for sequential finger movements was evaluated in right-handers before, immediately after, and 30 days following practice. The results demonstrate that unimanual practice induced a persistent shift of manual preference for the experimental task in…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Psychomotor Skills, Experiments, Handedness
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Christman, Stephen D.; Jasper, John D.; Sontam, Varalakshmi; Cooil, Bruce – Brain and Cognition, 2007
Research indicates that right-hemisphere mechanisms are specifically sensitive to and averse to risk. Research also indicates that mixed degree of handedness is associated with increased access to right hemisphere processing. Accordingly, it was predicted that mixed-handers would exhibit greater risk aversion. Participants were presented with…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Risk, Handedness, Comparative Analysis
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Whitehouse, Andrew J. O.; Bishop, Dorothy V. M. – Brain, 2008
A link between developmental language disorders and atypical cerebral lateralization has been postulated since the 1920s, but evidence has been indirect and inconsistent. The current study investigated this proposal using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasonography (fTCD), which assesses blood flow through the middle cerebral arteries serving…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Age, Autism, Language Impairments
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Kita, Sotaro; de Condappa, Olivier; Mohr, Christine – Brain and Language, 2007
Differential activation levels of the two hemispheres due to hemispheric specialization for various linguistic processes might determine hand choice for co-speech gestures. To test this hypothesis, we compared hand choices for gesturing in 20 healthy right-handed participants during explanation of metaphorical vs. non-metaphorical meanings, on the…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Speech, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Handedness
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Adam, Jos J.; Moresi, Sofie – Brain and Cognition, 2007
This research tested the response inhibition account of the hand-advantage found in the finger precuing task. According to this account, the advantage of preparing two fingers on one hand (represented in one hemisphere) as opposed to preparing two fingers on two hands (represented in two hemispheres) is due, in part, to a response inhibition…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Hypothesis Testing, Handedness, Reaction Time
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Papadatou-Pastou, Marietta; Martin, Maryanne; Munafo, Marcus R.; Jones, Gregory V. – Psychological Bulletin, 2008
Human handedness, a marker for language lateralization in the brain, continues to attract great research interest. A widely reported but not universal finding is a greater male tendency toward left-handedness. Here the authors present a meta-analysis of k = 144 studies, totaling N = 1,787,629 participants, the results of which demonstrate that the…
Descriptors: Handedness, Gender Differences, Meta Analysis, Brain
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Hopkins, William D. – Psychological Bulletin, 2006
Historically, population-level handedness has been considered a hallmark of human evolution. Whether nonhuman primates exhibit population-level handedness remains a topic of considerable debate. This paper summarizes published data on handedness in great apes. Comparative analysis indicated that chimpanzees and bonobos show population-level right…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Handedness, Primatology, Heredity
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Chiviacowsky, Suzete; Wulf, Gabriele – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2007
Recent studies (Chiviacowsky & Wulf, 2002, 2005) have shown that learners prefer to receive feedback after they believe they had a "good" rather than "poor" trial. The present study followed up on this finding and examined whether learning would benefit if individuals received feedback after good relative to poor trials. Participants practiced a…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Handedness, Object Manipulation, Attitude Measures
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Hale, T. Sigi; Loo, Sandra K.; Zaidel, Eran; Hanada, Grant; Macion, James; Smalley, Susan L. – Journal of Attention Disorders, 2009
Introduction: Early observations from lesion studies suggested right hemisphere (RH) dysfunction in ADHD. However, a strictly right-lateralized deficit has not been well supported. An alternatively view suggests increased R greater than L asymmetry of brain function and abnormal interhemispheric interaction. If true, RH pathology in ADHD should…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Pathology, Brain, Cognitive Ability
Brodie, E.E.; Dunn, E.M. – Brain and Cognition, 2005
Visual line bisection was investigated in 26 sinistral and 24 dextral subjects as a function of hemispace, hand and scan direction. An ANOVA revealed significant main effects for hand preference, due to the mean bisection errors of dextral subjects being significantly leftward of those of sinistral subjects; for hand, due to the bisection errors…
Descriptors: Interaction, Attention, Handedness
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Porac, Clare; Searleman, Alan; Karagiannakis, Katina – Brain and Cognition, 2006
When neurologically normal individuals bisect a horizontal line as accurately as possible, they reliably show a slight leftward error. This leftward inaccuracy is called "pseudoneglect" because errors made by neurologically normal individuals are directionally opposite to those made by persons with visuospatial neglect (Jewell & McCourt, 2000). In…
Descriptors: Attention, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Handedness, Stimuli
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Tomer, Rachel – Neuropsychologia, 2008
Pseudoneglect is traditionally viewed as reflecting right hemisphere specialization for processing spatial information, which brings about relatively greater activation of the right hemisphere and orienting towards the contralateral space. Such interpretation implies that the leftward attentional bias is a population trait. Animal studies,…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Attention, Spatial Ability, Individual Differences
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Barnett-Cowan, M.; Peters, M. – Brain and Cognition, 2004
Subjects had to judge the size of a tactile stimulus held in the unseen hand, while a visible phantom hand representing that unseen hand held a tactile stimulus of same or different size. No asymmetries in interference effects were found that could be related to hand or handedness. The method lends itself to quantification of virtual reality box…
Descriptors: Handedness, Influences, Cognitive Processes
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Huijbregts, Stephan C. J.; Warren, Alison J.; de Sonneville, Leo M. J.; Swaab-Barneveld, Hanna – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 2008
This study examined whether children exposed to prenatal smoking show deficits in "hot" and/or "cool" executive functioning (EF). Hot EF is involved in regulation of affect and motivation, whereas cool EF is involved in handling abstract, decontextualized problems. Forty 7 to 9-year-old children (15 exposed to prenatal smoking, 25 non-exposed)…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Smoking, Hyperactivity, Pregnancy
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Sasaki, Hitoshi; Morimoto, Akiko; Nishio, Akira; Matsuura, Sumie – Brain and Cognition, 2007
Three experiments were carried out to investigate hemispheric asymmetry in color processing among normal participants. In Experiment 1, it was shown that the reaction times (RTs) of the dominant and non-dominant hands assessed using a visual target presented at the central visual field, were not significantly different. In Experiment 2, RTs of…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Color, Brain, Visual Perception
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