Publication | Open Access
Effect of Familial Sinistrality on Planum Temporale Surface and Brain Tissue Asymmetries
47
Citations
81
References
2009
Year
NeuropsychologyBrain Tissue AsymmetriesBrain FunctionDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceWhite MatterNeurolinguisticsBrain MappingBrain OrganizationPlanum Temporale SurfaceSocial SciencesPsychologyLeft PtBrain AsymmetryFamilial SinistralityNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceBrain StructureNeuroimagingNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicineClose RelativesLeft Pt Size
The impact of having left-handers (LHs) among one's close relatives, called familial sinistrality (FS), on neuroanatomical markers of left-hemisphere language specialization was studied in 274 normal adults, including 199 men and 75 women, among whom 77 men and 27 women were positive for FS. Measurements of the surface of a phonological cortical area, the "planum temporale" (PT), and gray and white matter hemispheric volumes and asymmetries were made using brain magnetic resonance images. The size of the left PT of subjects with left-handed close relatives (FS+) was reduced by 10%, decreasing with the number of left-handed relatives, and lowest when the subject's mother was left-handed. Such findings had no counterparts in the right hemisphere, and the subject's handedness and sex were found to have no significant effect or interaction with FS on the left PT size. The FS+ subjects also exhibited increased gray matter volume, reduced hemispheric gray matter leftward asymmetry, and, in LHs, reduced strength of hand preference. These results add to the increasing body of evidence suggesting multiple and somewhat independent mechanisms for the inheritance of hand and language lateralization.
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