Correlations between hand preference and cortical thickness in the secondary somatosensory (SII) cortex of the common marmoset, callithrix jacchus. |
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Authors: | Gorrie, Catherine A. Waite, Phil M. E. Rogers, Lesley J. |
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Abstract: | [Correction Notice: An erratum for this article was reported in Vol 123(2) of Behavioral Neuroscience (see record 2009-04037-027). In this article, there were errors in figure 4 on p.1347 (missing labels along the x-axis) and in figure 5 on p. 1348 (distortion in the reproduction of the panels). The corrected figures are included.] Cortical asymmetries are well established in humans for language and motor regions and correlate with handedness. Here the authors investigate structural differences in the hemispheres of left- and right-handed common marmosets using surface photography and histology. The hand preferences of 11 marmosets were assessed over their adult life span using a simple reaching task. A significant correlation was found between the length of the right lateral sulcus/brain weight and the % right-hand preference (r = .86, p = .001). Cortical thickness on the superior bank of the right lateral sulcus posteriorly was also positively correlated with % right-hand preference (r = .69, p = .025). Comparison of this site with previously published functional maps of the marmoset cortex show this area corresponds to SII, a region involved in tactile processing and somatosensory discriminations. It is suggested that the correlation between SII thickness and right-hand preference would be consistent with the fact that right-handed marmosets are more proactive than left-handers in exploring novel objects by touch. Enlargement of a cortical area involved tactile discriminations could be a precursor to the evolution of right-handedness as a population bias. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | lateral sulcus sylvian fissure tactile discrimination laterality hand preference common marmoset somatosensory area |
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