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Handedness and the control of human technology and language
PsychologyHUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES COMMUNICATIONS

Handedness and the control of human technology and language

G. Kroliczak and L. Przybylski

This fascinating study by Gregory Kroliczak and Lukasz Przybylski explores how our handedness affects the brain processes involved in using tools. Through fMRI analysis of 62 participants, the researchers uncovered surprising hemispheric distinctions in tool use and grasp planning, suggesting a deep connection between these skills and language. Dive into the complexities of how tool use, language, and brain lateralization might have co-evolved!... show more
Abstract
The impact of handedness on neural substrates of common tool processing and tool use skills as proxies to the mechanisms underlying modern reciprocal relationships among humans and their brains, the tools they create and use, and technologies they implement and utilise, has only recently started to be elucidated. Yet, as most of the reports on lateralisation of such processing or skills focused on a single task, and sharp divisions of participants into right-, left-, and mixed-handed, or non-righthanded for the latter two groups combined, little is known about interrelationships between the neuronal underpinnings of different skilled manual actions—e.g., manual praxis skills in the form of disparate hand-tool interactions, including their most common neural phenotypes in the population at large. Here, in 62 individuals with different handedness status, we studied the laterality of two praxic abilities involving common tools. Even though their neural substrates were expected to be closely linked, we identified numerous cases (in 7/28 righthanders [RH] – 25%, and in 6/21 lefthanders [LH] – 29% of participants) with hemispheric dissociations in the underlying mechanisms. They involved both right-lateralised functional grasp planning vs. left-lateralised visual tool use (8% of all tested cases, 3/28 RH: –11%, and 2/21 LH: –10%), and vice versa (13% of all cases, 4/28 RH: ~14%, and 4/21 LH: –19% of participants). The laterality/organisation of these praxic skills was also compared to the laterality/organisation of productive language, with only few cases of dissociations identified. The observed phenotypes are discussed in the context of coevolutionary hypotheses linking ancient toolmaking and tool use skills, the associated cultural evolution, technological innovations, and language to the cortical expansion and functional lateralisation in human evolution.
Publisher
HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES COMMUNICATIONS
Published On
Nov 02, 2024
Authors
Gregory Kroliczak, Lukasz Przybylski
Tags
handednessneural substratestool processinglanguage productionfMRIbrain lateralizationpraxic skills
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