Although there is a vast literature on laterality of hand‐use in nonhuman primates, the Colobinae have been notably overlooked. Ten manual activities of differing complexity were studied in five male and five female adult Hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus) from a well habituated, wild population at Ramnagar, in southern Nepal. The activities recorded were carry, eat, hit, hold, idle, manipulate, reach, retrieve, self‐groom and social groom. This study aimed to examine handedness across tasks and across subjects in a natural population. The overall result was a lack of preference for subjects and patterns. Only in the eating activity did four individuals show significant hand preference, though they were not unidirectional. Eat seemed to b...
Primates exhibit laterality in hand usage either in terms of (a) hand with which an individual solve...
Primates exhibit laterality in hand usage either in terms of (a) hand with which an individual solve...
Humans are considered unique in their extreme population-level right handedness, seen in no other sp...
Although there is a vast literature on laterality of hand‐use in nonhuman primates, the Colobinae ha...
Although there is a vast literature on laterality of hand-use in nonhuman primates, the Colobinae ha...
Studies of hand preference s in the platyrrhine species are reviewed. Hand preferences of the N...
The strength of the evidence for population-level handedness in the great apes is a topic of consid-...
International audienceA number of factors have been proposed to influence within and between species...
Right-hand dominance is widely considered to be a uniquely human trait. Whether nonhuman primates ex...
Hand use for 8 activities was studied in 20 captive cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus). The purp...
International audienceThe extant literature on manual laterality in non-human primates is inconclusi...
International audienceAs non-human primates are phylogenetically close to humans, they are ideal mod...
The evolution of human right-handedness has been intensively debated for decades. Manual lateralizat...
There are two major theories that attempt to explain hand preference in non-human primates-the `task...
Laterality of function in hand use by the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) is unresolved. Ethological st...
Primates exhibit laterality in hand usage either in terms of (a) hand with which an individual solve...
Primates exhibit laterality in hand usage either in terms of (a) hand with which an individual solve...
Humans are considered unique in their extreme population-level right handedness, seen in no other sp...
Although there is a vast literature on laterality of hand‐use in nonhuman primates, the Colobinae ha...
Although there is a vast literature on laterality of hand-use in nonhuman primates, the Colobinae ha...
Studies of hand preference s in the platyrrhine species are reviewed. Hand preferences of the N...
The strength of the evidence for population-level handedness in the great apes is a topic of consid-...
International audienceA number of factors have been proposed to influence within and between species...
Right-hand dominance is widely considered to be a uniquely human trait. Whether nonhuman primates ex...
Hand use for 8 activities was studied in 20 captive cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus). The purp...
International audienceThe extant literature on manual laterality in non-human primates is inconclusi...
International audienceAs non-human primates are phylogenetically close to humans, they are ideal mod...
The evolution of human right-handedness has been intensively debated for decades. Manual lateralizat...
There are two major theories that attempt to explain hand preference in non-human primates-the `task...
Laterality of function in hand use by the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) is unresolved. Ethological st...
Primates exhibit laterality in hand usage either in terms of (a) hand with which an individual solve...
Primates exhibit laterality in hand usage either in terms of (a) hand with which an individual solve...
Humans are considered unique in their extreme population-level right handedness, seen in no other sp...