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Academic & Professional Books  Mammals  Primates

The Evolution of Hemispheric Specialization in Primates

Out of Print
Edited By: William D Hopkins
298 pages, Illus
Publisher: Academic Press
The Evolution of Hemispheric Specialization in Primates
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  • The Evolution of Hemispheric Specialization in Primates ISBN: 9780123741974 Paperback Sep 2007 Out of Print #170778
About this book Contents Biography Related titles

About this book

Hemispheric specialization, and lateralized sensory, cognitive or motor function of the left and right halves of the brain, commonly manifests in humans as right-handedness and left hemisphere specialization of language functions. Historically, this has been considered a hallmark of, and unique to, human evolution. Some theories propose that human right-handedness evolved in the context of language and speech while others that it was a product of the increasing motor demands associated with feeding or tool-use.

In the past 20-25 years, there has been a plethora of research in animals on the topic of whether population-level asymmetries in behavioral processes or neuro-anatomical structures exist in animals, notably primates and people have begun to question the historical assumptions that hemispheric specialization is unique to humans.

This book brings together various summary chapters on the expression of behavioral and neuro-anatomical asymmetries in primates. Several chapters summarize entire families of primates while others focus on genetic and non-genetic models of handedness in humans and how they can be tested in non-human primates. In addition, it makes explicit links between various theoretical models of the development of handedness in humans with the observed patterns of results in non-human primates. A second emphasis is on comparative studies of handedness in primates. There is now enough data in the literature across different species to present an evolutionary tree for the emergence of handedness (and perhaps other aspects of hemispheric specialization, such as neuro-anatomical asymmetries) and its relation to specific morphological and ecological adaptations in various primate species.

Contents

Cerebral asymmetry and human uniquenessLateralization in its many forms, and its evolution and developmentPresent status of the postural origins theoryMicrostructural asymmetries of the cerebral cortex in humans and other mammalsFunctional and structural asymmetries for auditory perception and vocal production in non-human primatesHandedness and neuroanatomical asymmetries in captive chimpanzees: a summary of 15 years of researchPerceptual and motor lateralization in two species of baboonsFactors affecting manual laterality in tufted capuchins (Cebus apella)Prosimian primates as models of lateralityThe biological correlates of hand preference in Rhesus Macques

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Biography

Edited by William D. Hopkins
Out of Print
Edited By: William D Hopkins
298 pages, Illus
Publisher: Academic Press
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