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Original Article

Hemisphere specialization of the animal brain for information processing principles

Pages 75-89 | Received 20 Oct 1982, Published online: 07 Jul 2009

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Read on this site (2)

Vsevolod L. Bianki & Elena B. Filippova. (1985) Hemisphere Lateralization of the Extrapolation Reflex. International Journal of Neuroscience 25:3-4, pages 195-205.
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Vsevolod L. Bianki & Victoria A. Shrammapril. (1985) New Evidence on the Callosal System. International Journal of Neuroscience 25:3-4, pages 175-193.
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Articles from other publishers (32)

M Fritzsche. (2003) The origin of brain asymmetry and its psychotic reversal. Medical Hypotheses 60:4, pages 468-480.
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Natale Belluardo, Giuseppa Mudo`, Silvano Cella & Mauro Bindoni. (1990) Effect of cerebral hemisphere decortication on the cytotoxic activity of natural killer and natural cytotoxic lymphocytes in the mouse. Brain Research 524:2, pages 297-302.
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R.J. Andrew. (1988) The development of visual lateralization in the domestic chick. Behavioural Brain Research 29:3, pages 201-209.
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Peter F. MacNeilage, Michael G. Studdert-Kennedy & Bjorn Lindblom. (2010) Primate predatory, postural, and prehensile proclivities and professional peer pressures: Postscripts. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 289-303.
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J. M. Warren. (2010) Primate handedness: Inadequate analysis, invalid conclusions. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 288-289.
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Stephen Walker. (2010) Or in the hand, or in the heart? Alternative routes to lateralization. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 288-288.
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Jacques Vauclair & Joël Fagot. (2010) Visually guided reaching in adult baboons. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 287-287.
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Michael Tomasello. (2010) Why the left hand?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 286-287.
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Horst D. Steklis & Linda F. Marchant. (2010) Primate handedness: Reaching and grasping for straws?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 284-286.
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George F. Michel & Debra A. Harkins. (2010) Ontogenetic considerations in the phylogenetic history and adaptive significance of the bias in human handedness. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 283-284.
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I. C. McManus. (2010) On the one hand, on the other hand: Statistical fallacies in laterality research. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 282-283.
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Walter F. McKeever. (2010) Primate handedness should be considered – but not “reconsidered” at this point. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 281-282.
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Marjorie LeMay. (2010) Evolution of handedness. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 281-281.
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Ralph A. W. Lehman. (2010) On the other hand …. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 280-281.
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Bryan Kolb & Bryan Fantie. (2010) Reaching for the brain. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 279-280.
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Harry J. Jerison. (2010) Which hand lost its cunning?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 278-279.
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Herbert Heuer. (2010) Does a hand preference indicate a hemispheric specialization?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 277-278.
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Yves Guiard. (2010) Precursors to what? Theory is lacking for handedness in humans. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 276-277.
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M. A. Goodale. (2010) Two hemispheres: One reaching hand. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 275-276.
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I. I. Glezer. (2010) The riddle of Carlyle: The unsolved problem of the origin of handedness. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 273-275.
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George Ettlinger. (2010) Primate handedness: How nice if it were really so. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 271-273.
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Ruthmary K. Deuel & Scott P. Schaffer. (2010) Patterns of hand preference in monkeys. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 270-271.
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Michael C. Corballis. (2010) Straw monkeys. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 269-270.
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Domenic V. Cicchetti. (2010) On viewing the evidence for primate handedness: Some biostatistical considerations. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 268-269.
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William H. Calvin. (2010) On evolutionary expectations of symmetry and toolmaking. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 267-268.
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M. P. Bryden & Runa E. Steenhuis. (2010) Handedness is a matter of degree. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 266-267.
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Bernadette Brésard & François Bresson. (2010) Reaching or manipulation: Left or right?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 265-266.
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John L. Bradshaw. (2010) But what about nonprimate asymmetries and nonmanual primate asymmetries?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 264-265.
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Marian Annett. (2010) Handedness as chance or as species characteristic. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 263-264.
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Peter F. MacNeilage, Michael G. Studdert-Kennedy & Bjorn Lindblom. (2010) Primate handedness reconsidered. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10:2, pages 247-263.
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L.J. Rogers. 1986. 147 189 .
G. Ettlinger. (1984) Humans, apes and monkeys: The changing neuropsychological viewpoint. Neuropsychologia 22:6, pages 685-696.
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