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Original Article

Relation of spatial reasoning ability to hand performance in male and female left-handers to familial sinistrality and writing hand

Pages 143-155 | Received 20 Feb 1990, Published online: 07 Jul 2009

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Read on this site (5)

FAIK BUDAK, TUNCAY MÜGE FILIZ, PINAR TOPSEVER & ÜNER TAN. (2005) CORRELATIONS BETWEEN NONVERBAL INTELLIGENCE AND NERVE CONDUCTION VELOCITIES IN RIGHT-HANDED MALE AND FEMALE SUBJECTS. International Journal of Neuroscience 115:5, pages 613-623.
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MEHMET YILDIRIM & CAFER MARANGOZ. (2004) EFFECTS OF NITRIC OXIDE ON PASSIVE AVOIDANCE LEARNING IN RATS. International Journal of Neuroscience 114:5, pages 597-606.
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VURAL KÜÇÜKATAY, SEVIN BALKAN, NAZMI YARAS, PIRAYE YARGIÇOGLU & AYSEL AGAR. (2002) THE EFFECT OF PERGOLIDE ON COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE OF YOUNG AND MIDDLE-AGED RATS. International Journal of Neuroscience 112:9, pages 1027-1036.
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Üner Tan, Ahmet AkgÜn & Münir Telatar. (1993) Relationships among Nonverbal Intelligence, Hand Speed, and Serum Testosterone Level in Left-Handed Male Subjects. International Journal of Neuroscience 71:1-4, pages 21-28.
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Üner Tan. (1992) The Relation of Body Height to Handedness in Male and Female Right- and Left-Handed Human Subjects. International Journal of Neuroscience 63:3-4, pages 217-220.
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Articles from other publishers (30)

Kristin Rostad, Andrew Mayer, Tak S. Fung & Lenora N. Brown. (2007) Sex-related differences in the correlations for tactile temporal thresholds, interhemispheric transfer times, and nonverbal intelligence. Personality and Individual Differences 43:7, pages 1733-1743.
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David C. Geary. (2010) On the biology and politics of cognitive sex differences. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 267-284.
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Ada H. Zohar. (2010) Genetic influences on sex differences in outstanding mathematical reasoning ability. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 266-267.
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Thomas Wynn, Forrest Tierson & Craig Palmer. (2010) Sex differences and evolutionary by-products. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 265-266.
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Hoben Thomas. (2010) Between-sex differences are often averaging artifacts. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 265-265.
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Üner Tan. (2010) We are far from understanding sex-related differences in spatial-mathematical abilities despite the theory of sexual selection. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 264-264.
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Julian C. Stanley & Heinrich Stumpf. (2010) Able youths and achievement tests. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 263-264.
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Julia A. Sherman. (2010) Spatial visualization and sex-related differences in mathematical problem solving. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 262-263.
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David C. Rowe. (2010) The twain shall meet: Uniting the analysis of sex differences and within-sex variation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 262-262.
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Diane Proudfoot. (2010) The logic of the sociobiological model Geary-style. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 261-261.
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Nora Newcombe & Mary Ann Baenninger. (2010) Sexual-selection accounts of human characteristics: Just So Stories or scientific hypotheses?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 259-260.
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Diana Eugenie Kornbrot. (2010) Resources dimorphism sexual selection and mathematics achievement. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 259-259.
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Meredith M. Kimball. (2010) Some problematic links between hunting and geometry. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 258-259.
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Lloyd G. Humphreys. (2010) A critic with a different perspective. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 257-258.
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Christy Hammer & R. Valentine Dusek. (2010) Brain differences, anthropological stories, and educational implications. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 257-257.
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Diane F. Halpern. (2010) Mating, math achievement, and other multiple relationships. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 256-256.
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Jeffrey W. Gillger. (2010) Sex differences in mathematical abllity: Genes, environment, and evolution. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 255-256.
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Michael T. Ghiselin. (2010) Differences in male and female cognitive abilities: Sexual selection or division of labor?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 254-255.
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Uta Frith & Francesca Happé. (2010) Mary has more: Sex differences, autism, coherence, and theory of mind. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 253-254.
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Jeffrey Foss. (2010) Arithmetic and old lace. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 252-253.
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Alan Feingold. (2010) On an evolutionary model of sex differences in mathematics: Do the data support the theory?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 252-252.
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Herman T. Epstein. (2010) Omissions relevant to gender-linked mathematical abilities. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 251-252.
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Ann Dowker. (2010) How important is spatial ability to mathematics?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 251-251.
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Hank Davis. (2010) Is there a comparative psychology of implicit mathematical knowledge?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 250-250.
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T. J. Crow. (2010) All sex differences in cognitive ability may be explained by an X-Y homologous gene determining degrees of cerebral asymmetry. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 249-250.
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Susan F. Chipman. (2010) Still far too sexy a topic. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 248-249.
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M. Beth Casey. (2010) Do gender differences in spatial skills mediate gender differences in mathematics among high-ability students?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 247-248.
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David C. Geary. (2010) Sexual selection and sex differences in mathematical abilities. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19:2, pages 229-247.
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G. Nagels, P. Mariön, B.A. Pickut, L. Timmermans & P.P. De Deyn. (1996) Actigraphic evaluation of handedness. Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology/Electromyography and Motor Control 101:3, pages 226-232.
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Üner Tan. (1996) Correlations between nonverbal intelligence and peripheral nerve conduction velocity in right-handed subjects: sex-related differences. International Journal of Psychophysiology 22:1-2, pages 123-128.
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