Left brain – right brain battle for attention

by YankeeJim | October 5, 2010 at 05:59 am
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In my experience, when one body part fails, another tries to compensate when it can and that goes for eyes, ears, and kidneys for that matter. Wherever there are two of something, in my observation.

From my book, Patchwork And So Forth (c)2009 Webook.com

“Grandmother Irons would often remark after Grandpa Roy told a story, "Roy, you are exaggerating. It wasn't exactly like that." I wanted to believe everything that he said, and would have none of it that contradicted his words. Why? It is because living life as it should be is always more pleasant than it truly is. If exactness is truth, and truth is less pleasant than modifications on fact, then I prefer the embellishment. I say this with caveats, of course.

 

Grandpa Roy loved baseball and especially the Cleveland Indians. I have a picture of him in the 1920’s in a baseball uniform, so I know that he played on a team somewhere. When I visited him as a boy we tossed the baseball. To this day in my memory, I imagined being on the pitcher's mound like Bob Feller and being coached by Grandpa Roy as I threw a no-hitter.

 

In life, I am ambidextrous. I can switch hit. Yet, when I am playing ball in the outfield, I favor throwing and catching from the left hand. When a ball comes my way, I catch with my glove; let it slide off, while holding the ball in my right hand, switch back to the left hand and throw the ball to base. This movement happened in break-neck speed, though not fast enough in a game. I was not made for baseball. Not on my list, Merlin.

 

Why did this right and left thing happen? My Dad was an engineer. He believed engineers should be right handed. I was born a left hander, and when he saw that, he put me through the right-hand school. Now, I eat right handed, write right handed, and paint right handed. Yet, there are many things that I do inherently with my left hand. I think left handed and by nature. I am a liberal. My relationship with my father was strained for part of my life and I think it had to do with this basic confrontation. I am a lefty. It probably goes on into that left brain and right brain discussion. As it turns out, I enjoy the internal conflict as it keeps the creative juices flowing.”

 

http://www.livescience.com/health/brain-pits-right-hand-vs-left-100939.html

“Health Constant Battle as Brain Pits Right Hand Against Left

By Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer

posted: 30 September 2010 10:44 am ET

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Most of us probably think of our hands as working together. But a new study finds that when it comes to reaching out for objects, it's a dog-eat-dog competition between left and right.

The research, published Sept. 27 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that magnetic pulses applied to certain areas of the brain can give one hand an advantage at being chosen to complete a task like reaching for an object. The findings reveal the mental race that happens every time we reach for an elevator button, for instance, but they might also be useful in retraining the brain after a stroke or brain injury, the researchers said.

"By understanding this process, we hope to be able to develop methods to overcome learned-limb disuse," Richard Ivry, a UC Berkeley neuroscientist who co-authored the study, said in a statement.

Meeting of the minds

Previous research provided tantalizing clues that when we make the seemingly simple decision to reach out with one hand, our brain actually prepares both hands for action. In one brain condition, known as "alien hand syndrome," people told to reach out with one hand will reach out with both, even though they claim no conscious control over the second hand.

Most of these people have damage to the corpus callosum, the structure that connects the two halves of the brain. That suggests each hemisphere prepares a hand to take the same action, with the left hemisphere controlling the right hand and the right hemisphere controlling the left hand. Then, at the last minute, both hemispheres come together for a final decision on which hand will act. In alien hand syndrome, the communication between hemispheres is disrupted, so both halves carry out their plans.

To test the competition theory, Ivry and his co-authors had participants, all right-handed, sit at a table, upon which they projected dots for the participants to reach for. In some experiments, the participants were told which hand to use, and in others, they had a choice between hands.

When participants had a choice, their reaction time slowed slightly, especially for dots near the middle of the table where both hands were nearby. That delay suggested extra milliseconds of processing are required for the brain to pick a hand.

Magnets on the brain

Next, the researchers scrambled the signal coming from one half of the brain with a magnet. Using transcranial magnetic stimulation, in which an electromagnet placed on the head stimulates the nerve cells of the brain, the researchers disrupted the posterior parietal cortex, an area toward the top and back of the brain that helps with planning of motor tasks.

When researchers stimulated the left side of the brain (the side that controls the right hand), participants' preference for their dominant right hand weakened. Use of the left hand went up 13.5 percent. The finding suggests that the posterior parietal cortex initiates the hand versus hand competition. When the stimulation "trips up" the right hand, the left pulls ahead and gets used more often.

Stimulating the right side of the brain, which controls the left hand, made no difference in hand use. The reason may have been that people already preferred their right hand and had little room to use it more, the researchers wrote, or perhaps the sides of the brain aren't quite equal in their importance to motor planning.

The researchers aren't sure why every one-handed move we make might start out as a two-handed plan. It may be that having a Plan B makes us faster to respond to fluid situations.

"In the middle of the decision process, things can change," said Flavio Oliveira, a UC Berkeley postdoctoral researcher and co-author on the paper. "So we need to change track."

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YankeeJim

Are Left-Handed People Smarter?

By Ben Mauk
12 March 2010 7:14 PM ET

Psychologists are far from a consensus on how to measure vague concepts like creativity and intelligence. Any declared correlation between those attributes and handedness will have to wait on a better understanding of the notions themselves.

So raise an eyebrow (right or left) at any labcoat making sweeping statements about the smarts of a potentially arbitrary 10 percent of the world's population. However, a few earnest studies have proposed interesting links between primary hand and cognitive skills.

It appears that righties may perform slightly better academically than lefties. Research also suggests that left-handers more often suffer learning disabilities and dyslexia. On the other hand, southpaws dominate in tasks involving the mental manipulation of objects, which might explain the high proportion of left-handed chess players. More general claims, especially concerning "right-brained" versus "left-brained" people, are more pseudo- than science. The only clear advantage lefties enjoy is on a baseball diamond.”


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