The performance of left-handed participants on a preferential reaching test.

scientific article published in March 2005

The performance of left-handed participants on a preferential reaching test. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/J.BANDC.2004.08.033
P8608Fatcat IDrelease_axxqhlmk4zde7fhdzy26fl5kby
P698PubMed publication ID15708205

P50authorPamela J BrydenQ57161492
P2093author name stringEric A Roy
Linda E Rohr
Carla M Mamolo
P433issue2
P304page(s)143-145
P577publication date2005-03-01
P1433published inBrain and CognitionQ4955810
P1476titleThe performance of left-handed participants on a preferential reaching test
P478volume57

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q41884670"Left neglected," but only in far space: spatial biases in healthy participants revealed in a visually guided grasping task
Q45839248Asymmetry in corticomotor facilitation revealed in right-handers in the context of haptic discrimination
Q48514374Evidence for right-hand feeding biases in a left-handed population.
Q44604568Grasping with the eyes of your hands: hapsis and vision modulate hand preference.
Q46728822Hand use for grasping in a bimanual task: evidence for different roles?
Q93061869Investigating the Efficacy of the Hand Selection Complexity Task Across the Lifespan
Q47610878Is Hand Selection Modulated by Cognitive-perceptual Load?
Q58198898Laterality Preference and Cognition: Cross-Syndrome Comparison of Patients with Trisomy 21 (Down), del7q11.23 (Williams–Beuren) and del22q11.2 (DiGeorge or Velo-Cardio-Facial) Syndromes
Q58198912Laterality in persons with intellectual disability II. Hand, foot, ear, and eye laterality in persons with Trisomy 21 and Williams-Beuren syndrome
Q33344410Left handedness does not extend to visually guided precision grasping.
Q50702022Manual asymmetries in the kinematics of a reach-to-grasp action.
Q33366471Stroke rehabilitation reaches a threshold
Q26781483The contributions of vision and haptics to reaching and grasping
Q38612679The influence of M. P. Bryden's work on lateralization of motor skill: Is the preferred hand selected for and better at tasks requiring a high degree of skill?

Search more.