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Hand preference in a captive island group of chimpanzees ( Pan troglodytes )
Author(s) -
Marchant Linda F.,
Steklis Horst D.
Publication year - 1986
Publication title -
american journal of primatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.988
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1098-2345
pISSN - 0275-2565
DOI - 10.1002/ajp.1350100403
Subject(s) - hand preference , troglodytes , psychology , task (project management) , preference , laterality , dominance (genetics) , lateralization of brain function , cognitive psychology , developmental psychology , audiology , biology , zoology , medicine , mathematics , biochemistry , statistics , management , gene , economics
Abstract Morphological cerebral asymmetries in chimpanzee brains, similar to those found in humans, in whom they are associated with speech and handedness, suggest the possibility of functional lateralization in the chimpanzee. This possibility was investigated by examining hand preferences in an island group of five chimpanzees on a series of unimanual and bimanual tasks that are diagnostic of human hand and cerebral dominance. Each subject was tested in a double compartment cage on three unimanual nonsequential, three unimanual sequential, and three bimanual coordination tasks. One of the three unimanual sequential tasks was a bar‐press task that is analogous to the commonly used human finger‐tapping task. For the unimanual tasks, exclusive of the bar‐press, the chimpanzees showed a highly individualistic pattern of hand preference that did not change as a function of task complexity. On the bar‐press task, four of five subjects produced higher rates with one hand compared to the other; however, relative hand performance on this task was unrelated to hand preference on the other unimanual tasks. For the group of subjects, performance rates did not differ between the left and right hands; however, a practice effect was observed for the right hand in all subjects. The bimanual tasks also revealed a complex pattern of individual handedness, with no trends apparent for the group as a whole. Consistent with previous findings, the results from these tests on this group of five chimpanzees suggest that cerebral morphological asymmetries in the chimpanzee are not associated with motor dominance as reflected in handedness.