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Journal ArticleDOI

Lateralization of functions in the vertebrate brain: A review

S. F. Walker
- 01 Aug 1980 - 
- Vol. 71, Iss: 3, pp 329-367
TLDR
Neuro-anatomical similarities between human and other vertebrate brains are considered, and data concerning physical asymmetries reviewed, and it seems possible that asymmetry of cerebral function are widespread in vertebrates.
Abstract
That the human left and right cerebral hemispheres perform different functions is widely accepted; but there is little evidence of whether or not similar functional asymmetries exist in non-human vertebrates. In this paper, neuro-anatomical similarities between human and other vertebrate brains are considered, and data concerning physical asymmetries reviewed. The defining features of human lateralization are taken to be right-handedness, as a skewed but continuous distribution of preferences, and a greater involvement of the left hemisphere in species-specific vocalization, with right-hemisphere superiority in spatial perception and emotionality less well-marked characteristics. Rodents, cats, at least one species of marsupial, and macaque monkeys have consistent hand preferences for food reaching. These may result from constitutional factors, but in every species studied the distribution of preferences is unskewed. Canaries appear to have left-hemisphere dominance of vocal production, and there is limited support for the conjecture that macaque monkeys have left-hemisphere dominance for reception of species-specific cries, and/or for short-term auditory memory. Left and right unilateral hemispheric damage may have appreciably different effects on emotionality in rats, sound localization in cats, and tactile discrimination in monkeys, although the available evidence is equivocal. It seems possible that asymmetries of cerebral function are widespread in vertebrates. In particular, left hemisphere dominance of species-specific communication might be common in birds and primates: left-hemisphere dominance of human speech may be an example of a general vertebrate tendency towards unilateral control of vocalization.

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Book ChapterDOI

Handedness in Apes and Monkeys: Some Views From the Past

TL;DR: Although there is broad agreement that individual animals may show reliable hand preference, the question of whether handedness is a species characteristic remains controversial (e.g., see MacNeilage, Studdert-Kennedy, & Lindblom, 1987, and commentaries).
Journal ArticleDOI

Right ear advantage for vocal communication in frogs results from both structural asymmetry and attention modulation

TL;DR: Though differences in the dynamic changes of the delta, alpha and beta bands in the left midbrain between acoustic stimuli were not statistically significant, these changes were stronger during the playback of HSA calls toward which females tend to allocate greater attentional resources, implying that REA in frogs results from the combined effects of structural asymmetry and attention modulation.
References
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Book

Biological Foundations of Language

TL;DR: The coming of language occurs at about the same age in every healthy child throughout the world as mentioned in this paper, strongly supporting the concept that genetically determined processes of maturation, rather than env...
Journal ArticleDOI

A classification of hand preference by association analysis.

TL;DR: An association analysis was made of the responses of young adults to a hand-preference questionnaire and it is believed to demonstrate that hand preference is distributed continuously and not discretely.
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.
Book

Principles of Neurology

TL;DR: This book covers broad aspects of clinical neurology necessary fro clinical practice, starting from patient approach, cardinal manifestations of neurological disease, to specific neruological diseases.