International audienceA number of factors have been proposed to influence within and between species variation in handedness in non-human primates. In the initial study, we assessed the influence of grip morphology on hand use for simple reaching in a sample of 564 great apes including 49 orangutans Pongo pygmaeus, 66 gorillas Gorilla gorilla, 354 chimpanzees Pan troglodytes and 95 bonobos Pan paniscus. Overall, we found a significant right hand bias for reaching. We also found a significant effect of the grip morphology of hand use. Grasping with the thumb and index finger was more prevalent in the right compared to left hand in all four species. There was no significant sex effect on the patterns of handedness. In a subsample of apes, we ...
Whether nonhuman primates exhibit population-level manual bias remains controversial. There is a gro...
This article is not available through ChesterRep.Studies of laterality of hand function in chimpanze...
Although there is a vast literature on laterality of hand‐use in nonhuman primates, the Colobinae ha...
International audienceA number of factors have been proposed to influence within and between species...
Comparative studies of primate grasping and manipulative behaviours in captivity have highlighted, ...
International audienceThe evolutionary origins of human right-handedness remain poorly understood. S...
The strength of the evidence for population-level handedness in the great apes is a topic of consid-...
Right-hand dominance is widely considered to be a uniquely human trait. Whether nonhuman primates ex...
Whether or not nonhuman primates exhibit population-level handedness remains a topic of considerable...
There is a common prevailing perception that humans possess a species-unique population-level right-...
The evolution of human right-handedness has been intensively debated for decades. Manual lateralizat...
International audienceAs non-human primates are phylogenetically close to humans, they are ideal mod...
Humans are considered unique in their extreme population-level right handedness, seen in no other sp...
Is human handedness unique? That is, do our nearest living relations, chimpanzee and bonobo (Pan spp...
Studies of hand preference s in the platyrrhine species are reviewed. Hand preferences of the N...
Whether nonhuman primates exhibit population-level manual bias remains controversial. There is a gro...
This article is not available through ChesterRep.Studies of laterality of hand function in chimpanze...
Although there is a vast literature on laterality of hand‐use in nonhuman primates, the Colobinae ha...
International audienceA number of factors have been proposed to influence within and between species...
Comparative studies of primate grasping and manipulative behaviours in captivity have highlighted, ...
International audienceThe evolutionary origins of human right-handedness remain poorly understood. S...
The strength of the evidence for population-level handedness in the great apes is a topic of consid-...
Right-hand dominance is widely considered to be a uniquely human trait. Whether nonhuman primates ex...
Whether or not nonhuman primates exhibit population-level handedness remains a topic of considerable...
There is a common prevailing perception that humans possess a species-unique population-level right-...
The evolution of human right-handedness has been intensively debated for decades. Manual lateralizat...
International audienceAs non-human primates are phylogenetically close to humans, they are ideal mod...
Humans are considered unique in their extreme population-level right handedness, seen in no other sp...
Is human handedness unique? That is, do our nearest living relations, chimpanzee and bonobo (Pan spp...
Studies of hand preference s in the platyrrhine species are reviewed. Hand preferences of the N...
Whether nonhuman primates exhibit population-level manual bias remains controversial. There is a gro...
This article is not available through ChesterRep.Studies of laterality of hand function in chimpanze...
Although there is a vast literature on laterality of hand‐use in nonhuman primates, the Colobinae ha...