International audienceWe review four studies investigating hand preferences for grasping versus pointing to objects at several spatial positions in human infants and three species of nonhuman primates using the same experimental setup. We expected that human infants and nonhuman primates present a comparable difference in their pattern of laterality according to tasks. We tested 6 capuchins, 6 macaques, 12 baboons, and 10 human infants. Those studies are the first of their kind to examine both human infants and nonhuman primate species with the same communicative task. Our results show remarkable convergence in the distribution of hand biases of human infants, baboons and macaques on the two kinds of tasks and an interesting divergence betw...
In literature there are large discrepancies about methods to assess cerebral lateralization in both ...
Handedness is a widely studied behavioral asymmetry that is commonly measured as a preference for us...
International audienceStudying the relationships between the directions of brain lateralization for ...
International audienceWe review four studies investigating hand preferences for grasping versus poin...
To test the role of gestures in the origin of language, we studied hand preferences for grasping or ...
International audienceIn both humans and apes, the production of communicative gestures appears to b...
Until the 1990s, the notion of brain lateralization—the division of labor between the two hemisphere...
International audienceCatarrhine primates gesture preferentially with their right hands, which led t...
International audienceSocial laterality is the core of two major theories: one concerns the evolutio...
The increasing body of research into human and non-human primates' gestural communication reflects t...
International audienceMultifactorial investigations of intraspecific laterality of primates' gestura...
International audienceA relevant approach to address the mechanisms underlying the emergence of the ...
The last decade has seen a resurgence of interest in laterality of function in primates, especially ...
International audienceUnderstanding variations of apes’ laterality between activities is a central i...
In literature there are large discrepancies about methods to assess cerebral lateralization in both ...
Handedness is a widely studied behavioral asymmetry that is commonly measured as a preference for us...
International audienceStudying the relationships between the directions of brain lateralization for ...
International audienceWe review four studies investigating hand preferences for grasping versus poin...
To test the role of gestures in the origin of language, we studied hand preferences for grasping or ...
International audienceIn both humans and apes, the production of communicative gestures appears to b...
Until the 1990s, the notion of brain lateralization—the division of labor between the two hemisphere...
International audienceCatarrhine primates gesture preferentially with their right hands, which led t...
International audienceSocial laterality is the core of two major theories: one concerns the evolutio...
The increasing body of research into human and non-human primates' gestural communication reflects t...
International audienceMultifactorial investigations of intraspecific laterality of primates' gestura...
International audienceA relevant approach to address the mechanisms underlying the emergence of the ...
The last decade has seen a resurgence of interest in laterality of function in primates, especially ...
International audienceUnderstanding variations of apes’ laterality between activities is a central i...
In literature there are large discrepancies about methods to assess cerebral lateralization in both ...
Handedness is a widely studied behavioral asymmetry that is commonly measured as a preference for us...
International audienceStudying the relationships between the directions of brain lateralization for ...