Corp Nadia, Byrne Richard W
Scottish Primate Research Group, School of Psychology, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife KY16 9JU, Scotland, UK.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2004 Jan;123(1):62-8. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.10218.
Chimpanzees at Mahale, Tanzania, show strong individual hand preferences when they use bimanual actions in processing the fruit of Saba florida and Citrus lemon. The direction of hand preference differs between the sexes: most males are left-handed, whereas most females are right-handed. Monkeys and apes are considered to lack "handedness," in the sense of a population mode of left- or right-hand preference; they are normally ambidextrous. Indeed, strong individual preferences were previously seldom found in natural tasks. We propose that lateralization of manual actions becomes advantageous in bimanual tasks, which involve role differentiation between the hands and a need to combine power and precision. If the pattern of lateralization found here reflects the ancestral state, common to chimpanzees and humans, this may explain why, in modern humans, women tend more strongly to be right-handed than men, who include a larger minority of left-handers.
坦桑尼亚马哈勒的黑猩猩在使用双手动作处理佛罗里达酒椰和柠檬的果实时有很强的个体用手偏好。用手偏好的方向在性别之间存在差异:大多数雄性是左撇子,而大多数雌性是右撇子。从左或右手偏好的群体模式意义上来说,猴子和猿类被认为缺乏“用手习惯”;它们通常双手都灵巧。确实,以前在自然任务中很少发现强烈的个体偏好。我们提出,手部动作的偏侧化在双手任务中变得有利,双手任务涉及双手之间的角色分化以及结合力量和精度的需求。如果这里发现的偏侧化模式反映了黑猩猩和人类共有的祖先状态,这可能解释了为什么在现代人类中,女性比男性更倾向于右撇子,男性中左撇子的比例更大。