Pirilä T, Jounio-Ervasti K, Sorri M
Department of Otolaryngology, University of Oulu, Finland.
Scand Audiol. 1991;20(4):223-6. doi: 10.3109/01050399109045967.
The possible effect of handedness on hearing threshold asymmetry was analysed in a large random population representing a normal population. The left ear was on an average slightly but significantly poorer than the right ear at high frequencies, especially at 4 kHz, while at low frequencies the right ear was on average poorer than the left ear. A matched control group of the right-handed subjects was formed for 211 left-handed subjects. Among the left-handed subjects the average ear asymmetry resembled the ear asymmetry of the whole population, the right-handed subpopulation, and of the matched control group. In conclusion, it seems that handedness cannot be responsible for the average inferiority of hearing in the left ear at 4-kHz or for the average slight superiority of the left ear at 0.125-0.5 kHz. However, this analysis does not rule out possible minor effects of handedness on ear asymmetry.