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Original Articles

Factor Structure of the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory Versus the Fazio Laterality Inventory in a Population With Established Atypical Handedness

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Pages 156-160 | Published online: 04 Feb 2015
 

Abstract

The Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (EHI) has consistently remained the most used handedness inventory despite its limitations. The psychometric properties of handedness inventories, however, are increasingly important due to their use in matching groups for neuroimaging research. This study compared the performance of the EHI and the Fazio Laterality Inventory (FLI) in a population with atypical handedness. Whereas the EHI demonstrated a single-factor loading in this population, the FLI's previously demonstrated single factor dissociated into two factors: fine motor/ballistic movements and expressive/instrumental movements. This dissociation is similar to that seen when tests of cognitive constructs—which tend to load on a single factor in intact populations—dissociate when administered to populations with difficulties in the assessed domain. This pattern of performance lends further support for the use of the FLI to more accurately assess handedness. Future research in other populations with atypical laterality may illuminate additional factors of the FLI.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

An initial analysis of a portion of these data was presented at the 2013 conference of the National Academy of Neuropsychology in San Diego, CA.

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