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This paper considers whether pathological influences affect hand-preference among children with epilepsy or mental retardation, for whom there is no evidence of gross motor defect. Data on two tasks of manual skill were analysed for a group of over 12,000 children. The predicted association between poor skill with the non-preferred hand and left-handedness was confirmed for the match-sorting test, and was particularly strong among children with a neurological abnormality (excluding cerebral palsy). No association between poor skill and left-handedness was found for the preferred hand. The data agreed well with a model which estimates hand preference it it occurs on the previously preferred side. The probability of pathological left-handedness among left-handers in an unselected population is about 0.05--this is much higher for children with a history of neurological disease, epilepsy or mental retardation, and for children with poor performance of the non-preferred hand.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1111/j.1469-8749.1984.tb04434.x

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

1984-04-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

26

Pages

214 - 226

Total pages

12

Keywords

Brain Damage, Chronic, Cerebral Palsy, Child, Child Development, Cognition Disorders, Dyslexia, Epilepsy, Functional Laterality, Humans, Intellectual Disability, Motor Skills, Psychological Tests, Psychomotor Performance