The pantomime of mental rotation: Left-handers are less lateralizedOpen Access

Helmich, Ingo; Meyer, Corinna; Voelk, Max; Coenen, Jessica; Mueller, Sophie; Schepmann, Julia; Lausberg, Hedda

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Introduction: The conceptualization of skilled hand movements (praxis) may be grounded in hemispherically specialized functions. However, a left-hemispherical advantage of (tool-use) pantomime gestures and a righthemispherical advantage of spatial gestures may be more prominent in right-handed than left-handed individuals. We therefore investigated the hypothesis that right-handed but not left-handed individuals show a superiority of the left hemisphere (/right-hand preference) for the execution of pantomime (rotation of an object) gestures as well as a right-hemispherical superiority (/left-hand preference) for gestures that depict spatial information (/positioning of an object). Methods: 20 right- and 20 left-handed participants were asked in two experiments to demonstrate with their two hands how to move tachistoscopically (in the left (LVF) or right visual hemifields (RVF)) presented geometric objects of different rotations into an identical final position. Two independent blind raters evaluated the videotaped hand gestures employing the Neuropsychological Gesture (NEUROGES) Coding System. Results: In contrast to left-handed individuals, right-handed individuals presentincreased pantomime - rotation gestures with the right hand and pantomime - position gestures with the left hand during stimuli presentation in either visual field. Left-handers showed significantly increased left-hand pantomime - rotation gestures during stimulus presentation within the LVF (only). Discussion: Right-handed individuals increase their pantomime - rotation gestures with the right hand to depict motion but use their left hand for pantomime - position gestures to describe spatial relations of the objects. Left-handers do not show a clear lateralization of the right and left hand with regards to either handedness or hemispherically lateralized motor functions. The hemispherical lateralization of praxis functions is therefore more pronounced in right-handed than left-handed individuals.

Details about the publication

JournalNeuropsychologia
Volume176
Issue108385
StatusPublished
Release year2022
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2022.108385
Link to the full texthttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0028393222002445?via%3Dihub
Keywordsmotor-cognition; hemispherical specialization; pantomime rotation gestures; pantomime position gestures; handedness

Authors from the University of Münster

Coenen, Jessica
Professorship of Neuromotor Behavior and Exercise (Prof. Voelcker-Rehage)
Professorship for Psychologiscal Diagnostics and Personality Psychology (Prof. Back)