The Andante was played with melting beauty, but without the slightest suggestion of heavy handedness. |
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Another result concerning handedness of the progeny of discordant monozygotic twins suggests that lefties are one gene apart from righties. |
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He has also conducted several reviews and studies of cerebral laterality, primarily through investigations of handedness patterns. |
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The contribution of genetics in handedness has been supported by studies of families of concordant twins and adopted individuals. |
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A major problem faced in studies of a complex trait such as handedness concerns the criteria used to define a person's handedness. |
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The organ that I'm thinking of is the brain, which looks rather symmetric, true, but is about as full of handedness as an organ can get. |
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We did not feel that it was justified to include handedness as a covariate in our ANCOVA analysis. |
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Rather, the R gene dictates nonrandom distribution of handedness and whorling traits only with respect to the left-right body axis. |
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To further probe for a biological basis of handedness, the researchers examined handedness among pairs of chimp siblings. |
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Reversed handedness among fossil polychaete jaws was recently described by Bergman. |
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Even so, I firmly believe that the consequences of handedness can provide a credible basis for our emergent freedom. |
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Nearly all right-handers are left-brained for language, suggesting that the D allele controls both handedness and brain dominance for language. |
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In a study involving 93 people, they found a strong statistical connection between handedness and cerebral dopamine asymmetries. |
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Various statistics, such as identical twins with different handedness, have blown most genetic theories. |
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It's no wonder that psychologists adopted the view that handedness is a learned behavior. |
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Our approach in the 2002 paper was an analysis of covariance, with age and handedness as covariates. |
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When swimming front crawl, to which side do you breathe, and what is your usual handedness? |
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Issues of cross laterality or mixed dominance make the whole subject area a minefield, and I am therefore only going to consider writing handedness. |
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Although microscopic jaw structures and reversed handedness are not the primary focus of this study, some observations are nevertheless noteworthy. |
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This lateralization is a hallmark of modern humans and is reflected in handedness. |
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The structural tetrahedrons spiral upward through the crystal in the sense of the handedness parallel to the c axis. |
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Drug molecules with the wrong handedness will not fit the shape of the space they are aimed at. |
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The difference between left and right carries more meaning to human beings than mere matters of handedness and symmetry. |
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Chirality describes the handedness of a molecule that is observable by the ability of a molecule to rotate the plane of polarized light either to the right or to the left. |
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Biased handedness was traditionally thought to be a uniquely human trait, thought to relate to the separate functions for the two halves of the brain. |
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There appears to be no strong correlation to the person's handedness. |
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But this is hardly a definitive answer to the question of handedness. |
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No difference existed between groups in measures of cognitive functioning, working memory and attention, depression, anxiety, schizotypy, or handedness. |
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Historically there was less consistency in the relationship of the position of the driver to the handedness of traffic. |
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The handedness of the twist is the direction of the twists as they progress away from an observer. |
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Although knot identification and chirality can be associated with an individual, most people believe that this chirality is a direct correlation to their handedness. |
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The development of handedness derives from a mixture of genes, environment, and cultural pressure to conform to right-handedness. |
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All twining plants exhibit handedness, which scientists term chirality, but botanists believe it has nothing to do with which hemisphere they grow in, but rather is an inborn tendency that varies by species. |
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But the recessive form of the gene does not cause left-handedness or ambidextrousness 6 it means that there is no preference for either, and handedness becomes a 50-50 chance. |
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Thus let us assume an unweird model of the cosmos in which the handedness of objects is a well-defined global property, in relation to the background metric of space-time. |
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