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Stress exposure, hand preference, and hand skill: A deep phenotyping approach

Annakarina Mundorf, Stephan Getzmann, Patrick D. Gajewski, Mauro F. Larra, Edmund Wascher, Sebastian Ocklenburg

2023Laterality Asymmetries of Body Brain and Cognition16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Stress exposure and reactivity may show differential associations with handedness, but shallow phenotyping may influence the current knowledge. Importantly, different handedness measures do not necessarily show high correlations with each other and should not be used interchangeably as they may reflect different dimensions of laterality. Here, data on handedness from 599 participants in the population-based, longitudinal Dortmund Vital Study was used to determine various asymmetry indices. Hand preference was assessed with the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (EHI) and the lateral preference inventory (LPI) measuring handedness, footedness, earedness, and eyedness. Hand performance was determined using the pegboard test. In addition, data on several dimensions of stress exposure and reactivity, including hair cortisol, and mental well-being was analysed to determine associations with handedness. All handedness measures correlated significantly with each other, with the strongest correlation between the EHI and the LPI handedness score. The EHI and LPI hand measures resulted in the highest effect sizes and most consistent correlations with stress or mental well-being. In contrast, the pegboard test only showed very little association with the stress and mental well-being measures. This highlights the importance of handedness phenotyping. Including preference measures is recommended to disentangle the link between handedness and mental health.

Topics & Concepts

Hand preferenceLateralityPsychologyPreferenceAudiologyCorrelationDevelopmental psychologyAssociation (psychology)Fluctuating asymmetryPopulationClinical psychologyDemographyMedicineStatisticsBiologyMathematicsPsychotherapistGeometryEvolutionary biologySociologyHemispheric Asymmetry in NeuroscienceDermatoglyphics and Human Traits
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