Department of Psychology, University of Westminster, 309 Regent Street, London W1B 2UW, UK.
Anim Cogn. 2011 Nov;14(6):903-7. doi: 10.1007/s10071-011-0413-6. Epub 2011 May 12.
We investigated the unimanual actions of a biological family group of twelve western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) using a methodological approach designed to assess behavior within social context from a bottom-up perspective. Measures of both the lateralization of unimanual actions (left, right) and the target of the action (animate, inanimate) were assessed during dual, synchronized video observations of naturalistic behavior. This paper demonstrates a corelationship between handedness and the animate quality of the target object. Analyses demonstrated a significant interaction between lateralized unimanual actions and target animacy and a right-hand bias for actions directed toward inanimate targets. We suggest that lateralized motor preference reflects the different processing capabilities of the left and right hemispheres, as influenced by the emotive (animate) and/or functional (inanimate) characteristics of the target, respectively.
我们采用一种自下而上的方法研究了一个由 12 只西部低地大猩猩(Gorilla gorilla gorilla)组成的生物家族群体的单手动作,该方法旨在评估社会背景下的行为。在对自然行为进行双同步视频观察期间,评估了单手动作(左手、右手)的偏侧性和动作目标(有生命、无生命)的偏侧性。本文证明了手性与目标物体的有生命质量之间存在核心关系。分析表明,偏侧性单手动作与目标生物性之间存在显著的相互作用,并且对于指向无生命目标的动作存在右手偏好。我们认为,偏侧性运动偏好反映了左右半球的不同处理能力,这分别受到目标的情感(有生命)和/或功能(无生命)特征的影响。