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Cerebral organization of motor programming and verbal processing as a function of degree of hand preference and familial sinistrality
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Cerebral organization of motor programming and verbal processing as a function of degree of hand preference and familial sinistrality

Anne M. Keane
Brain and cognition, Vol.40(3), pp.500-515
1999

Abstract

Psychology
Seventy-six right- and left-handed subjects responded to monaurally presented verbal stimuli (CVs) using their right and left hands on separate occasions. Both degree of hand preference and familial sinistrality (FS) were taken into account. It was found that, contrary to expectation, the manual response interfered with the verbal perception task, but only in the consistent strong handers. The pattern of interference suggests that those with a consistent hand preference (right or left) have general motor programming in the left hemisphere. Those with an inconsistent strong hand preference probably have some degree of general motor programming in both hemispheres. No effect for FS was found for the lateralization of verbal processing or general motor programming.
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