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Original Articles

Inconsistent handedness and saccade execution benefit face memory without affecting interhemispheric interaction

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Pages 613-624 | Received 17 Nov 2010, Accepted 26 May 2011, Published online: 15 Sep 2011

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (13)

Ali Bahari & Jafar Hasani. (2023) Both direction and degree of handedness as influential factors in rumination. Laterality 0:0, pages 1-29.
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Adam Parkin, Andrew Parker & Neil Dagnall. (2023) Effects of saccadic eye movements on episodic & semantic memory fluency in older and younger participants. Memory 31:1, pages 34-46.
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John D. Jasper, Stephen D. Christman & Evan Clarkson. (2021) Predicting interactions in handedness research: The role of integrated versus independent dual-processes. Laterality 26:6, pages 607-623.
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Henry Otgaar, Sanne T. L. Houben, Eric Rassin & Harald Merckelbach. (2021) Memory and eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy: a potentially risky combination in the courtroom. Memory 29:9, pages 1254-1262.
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Marcus L. Leppanen, Keith B. Lyle, Freya M. Edlin & Vanessa D. Schäfke. (2019) Is self-report a valid measure of unimanual object-based task performance?. Laterality 24:5, pages 538-558.
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M. Smit, D. I. Kooistra, I. J. M. van der Ham & H. C. Dijkerman. (2017) Laterality and body ownership: Effect of handedness on experience of the rubber hand illusion. Laterality 22:6, pages 703-724.
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Eric C. Prichard & Stephen D. Christman. (2017) Inconsistent-handed advantage in episodic memory extends to paragraph-level materials. Memory 25:8, pages 1063-1071.
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Alessandra McDowell, Adam Felton, David Vazquez & Christine Chiarello. (2016) Neurostructural correlates of consistent and weak handedness. Laterality 21:4-6, pages 348-370.
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Keith B. Lyle & Michael C. Grillo. (2014) Consistent-handed individuals are more authoritarian. Laterality 19:2, pages 146-163.
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Keith B. Lyle, L. Kevin Chapman & Jessica M. Hatton. (2013) Is handedness related to anxiety? New answers to an old question. Laterality 18:5, pages 520-535.
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Articles from other publishers (16)

R. Hans Phaf. (2023) Merging and modifying hypotheses on the emotional and cognitive effects of eye movements: The dopaminergic regulation hypothesis. New Ideas in Psychology 70, pages 101026.
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Elke KrausElke Kraus. 2023. Beyond Left and Right Handedness. Beyond Left and Right Handedness 81 100 .
Anna M. Kelley & Keith B. Lyle. (2020) Repetitive Saccadic Eye Movements Enhance Eyewitness Recall in Specific-Open Questioning. Journal of Cognitive Enhancement 5:4, pages 420-433.
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R. Hans Phaf, Merel E. Hermans, Alexander Krepel, Ricardo L.R. Lieuw-On, Charlotte B. Mulder & Sabine Weijland. (2021) Horizontal eye movements foster approach to negative pictures but do not change emotional valence: A dopaminergic regulation hypothesis. New Ideas in Psychology 62, pages 100872.
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You Cheng, Mary Hegarty & Elizabeth R. Chrastil. (2020) Telling right from right: the influence of handedness in the mental rotation of hands. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications 5:1.
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Andrew Parker, Jolyon Poole & Neil Dagnall. (2019) Saccade-induced retrieval enhancement and the recovery of perceptual item-specific information. Cognitive Processing 21:2, pages 223-237.
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Timothy M. Ellmore, Bridget Mackin & Kenneth Ng. (2018) Saccades and handedness interact to affect scene memory. PeerJ 6, pages e5969.
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Andrew Parker, Daniel Powell & Neil Dagnall. (2018) Effects of Saccade Induced Retrieval Enhancement on conceptual and perceptual tests of explicit & implicit memory. Brain and Cognition 121, pages 1-10.
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Keith B. Lyle, Brynn A. Dombroski, Leonard Faul, Robin F. Hopkins, Farah Naaz, Andrew E. Switala & Brendan E. Depue. (2017) Bimanual coordination positively predicts episodic memory: A combined behavioral and MRI investigation. Brain and Cognition 118, pages 71-79.
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Andrew Parker, Adam Parkin & Neil Dagnall. (2017) Effects of handedness & saccadic bilateral eye movements on the specificity of past autobiographical memory & episodic future thinking. Brain and Cognition 114, pages 40-51.
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Varsha Singh. (2016) Sex-Differences, Handedness, and Lateralization in the Iowa Gambling Task. Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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Aparna Sahu & Stephen D. Christman. (2014) Handedness differences observed in episodic memory retrieval do not extend to the domain of prospective memory. Brain and Cognition 92, pages 118-122.
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Brandon Keller, Larry Stevens, Colleen Lui, James Murray & Matthew Yaggie. (2014) The Effects of Bilateral Eye Movements on EEG Coherence When Recalling a Pleasant Memory. Journal of EMDR Practice and Research 8:3, pages 113-128.
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Larissa Arning, Sebastian Ocklenburg, Stefanie Schulz, Vanessa Ness, Wanda M. Gerding, Jan G. Hengstler, Michael Falkenstein, Jörg T. Epplen, Onur Güntürkün & Christian Beste. (2013) PCSK6 VNTR Polymorphism Is Associated with Degree of Handedness but Not Direction of Handedness. PLoS ONE 8:6, pages e67251.
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James M. Edlin & Keith B. Lyle. (2013) The effect of repetitive saccade execution on the attention network test: Enhancing executive function with a flick of the eyes. Brain and Cognition 81:3, pages 345-351.
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Sander Nieuwenhuis, Bernet M. Elzinga, Priscilla H. Ras, Floris Berends, Peter Duijs, Zoe Samara & Heleen A. Slagter. (2013) Bilateral saccadic eye movements and tactile stimulation, but not auditory stimulation, enhance memory retrieval. Brain and Cognition 81:1, pages 52-56.
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