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Journal ArticleDOI

Brain Lateralization: A Comparative Perspective.

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TLDR
Novel animal models and approaches could be established in the last decades, and they already produced a substantial increase of knowledge, and insights from these comparative studies are crucial to understand the functions and pathologies of the authors' asymmetric brain.
Abstract
Comparative studies on brain asymmetry date back to the 19th century but then largely disappeared due to the assumption that lateralization is uniquely human. Since the reemergence of this field in the 1970s, we learned that left-right differences of brain and behavior exist throughout the animal kingdom and pay off in terms of sensory, cognitive, and motor efficiency. Ontogenetically, lateralization starts in many species with asymmetrical expression patterns of genes within the Nodal cascade that set up the scene for later complex interactions of genetic, environmental, and epigenetic factors. These take effect during different time points of ontogeny and create asymmetries of neural networks in diverse species. As a result, depending on task demands, left- or right-hemispheric loops of feedforward or feedback projections are then activated and can temporarily dominate a neural process. In addition, asymmetries of commissural transfer can shape lateralized processes in each hemisphere. It is still unclear if interhemispheric interactions depend on an inhibition/excitation dichotomy or instead adjust the contralateral temporal neural structure to delay the other hemisphere or synchronize with it during joint action. As outlined in our review, novel animal models and approaches could be established in the last decades, and they already produced a substantial increase of knowledge. Since there is practically no realm of human perception, cognition, emotion, or action that is not affected by our lateralized neural organization, insights from these comparative studies are crucial to understand the functions and pathologies of our asymmetric brain.

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Citations
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The genetic architecture of structural left-right asymmetry of the human brain

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How does hemispheric specialization contribute to human-defining cognition?

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The genetic architecture of structural left-right asymmetry of the human brain

TL;DR: Genetic variants affecting brain asymmetry overlapped with those influencing autism, educational attainment and schizophrenia, consistent with a known role of the cytoskeleton in left-right axis determination in other organs of invertebrates and frogs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The structure of the nervous system of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans

TL;DR: The structure and connectivity of the nervous system of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans has been deduced from reconstructions of electron micrographs of serial sections as discussed by the authors.
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Forest before trees: The precedence of global features in visual perception ☆

TL;DR: The idea that global structuring of a visual scene precedes analysis of local features is suggested, discussed, and tested as discussed by the authors, and it was found that global differences were detected more often than local differences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human Brain: Left-Right Asymmetries in Temporal Speech Region

TL;DR: The planum temporale (the area behind Hesch's gyrus) is larger on the left in 65 percent of brains; on the right it is larger in only 11 percent.
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Cerebral lateralization. Biological mechanisms, associations, and pathology: II. A hypothesis and a program for research.

TL;DR: The hypothesis is that slowed growth within certain zones of the left hemisphere is likely to result in enlargement of other cortical regions, in particular, the homologous contralateral area, but also adjacent unfaffected regions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The molecular hallmarks of epigenetic control

TL;DR: A personal perspective on the development of epigenetics, from its historical origins to what is defined as 'the modern era of epigenetic research', is provided.
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