Study: Your Dominant Hand Isn't Actually Hard-Wired
Are you right-handed? Left-handed? Or even ambidextrous? For most of your life, you've probably heard that this has something to do with the way your brain is hardwired: that preference seems to show up even before you are born, after all.
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LampLighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2026/07/18
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More from the article ...
... But a new study by neurologists at the University of California, Los Angeles and Johns Hopkins University suggests that arm dominance is much more to do with practice than something innate within the brain. "Limb dominance is often taken as evidence that the dominant hemisphere is intrinsically better at motor control," write Ahmet Arac, Nicolas Jeong Lee, and John Krakauer, in a paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. "We tested an alternative: dominance reflects asymmetric practice with tools and objects requiring precise control of complex trajectory shapes." Since most people have already been using their dominant hand loyally throughout their lives, it's difficult to design an experiment to test this hypothesis. Arac and colleagues came up with a clever way to control for existing dominance, though: making people write with their elbows, something most people have probably never attempted, let alone practiced, before. ...
"Limb dominance is often taken as evidence that the dominant hemisphere is intrinsically better at motor control," write Ahmet Arac, Nicolas Jeong Lee, and John Krakauer, in a paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"We tested an alternative: dominance reflects asymmetric practice with tools and objects requiring precise control of complex trajectory shapes."
Since most people have already been using their dominant hand loyally throughout their lives, it's difficult to design an experiment to test this hypothesis.
Arac and colleagues came up with a clever way to control for existing dominance, though: making people write with their elbows, something most people have probably never attempted, let alone practiced, before. ...
#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-07-16 12:16 AM | Reply
This is kind of understood from generations ago when people who favored their left hand got smacked with a ruler and forced to use their right hand.
#2 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-07-18 05:37 PM | Reply
#2
My mom always thought that's what happened to me in elementary school; I write right handed, but with 'backhand' slant to the left.
#3 | Posted by Corky at 2026-07-18 05:42 PM | Reply
Yeahwhatever. Give it a shot...see what happens.
#4 | Posted by Angrydad at 2026-07-18 06:28 PM | Reply
"Since most people have already been using their dominant hand loyally throughout their lives, it's difficult to design an experiment to test this hypothesis."
LOL!!!
#5 | Posted by Angrydad at 2026-07-18 06:38 PM | Reply
Amputees have been learning to use non-dominant hands as long as there have been amputees.
#6 | Posted by morris at 2026-07-18 08:04 PM | Reply
Obviously right-handed people are terrified of lefties, so this study ranks as a 4 on the cuteness meter.
What I find fascinating is that phantom limb pain is stopped using a mirror.
#7 | Posted by redlightrobot at 2026-07-18 10:55 PM | Reply
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