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  • Επιστημονικές Δημοσιεύσεις Μελών ΠΘ (ΕΔΠΘ)
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Dyslexia and hand preference in secondary school students

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Auteur
Vlachos, F.; Andreou, E.; Delliou, A.; Agapitou, P.
Date
2013
DOI
10.3922/j.psns.2013.1.10
Sujet
Dyslexia
Hand preference
Secondary school students
adolescent
adult
article
clinical article
controlled study
Edinburgh Handedness Inventory
female
handedness
human
left handedness
male
psychologic test
questionnaire
right handedness
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Résumé
Research results with regard to handedness and dyslexia have been ambiguous. The present study investigated the relationship between handedness and dyslexia in secondary school students based on genetic (Right-Shift) and hormonaldevelopmental theories of handedness. A total of 135 students (45 dyslexics and 70 age- and sex-matched controls) participated in the study. Handedness was defined according to the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory. We developed several classifications that represented various levels of handedness. Both continuous and dichotomous classifications of handedness revealed a small but reliable increase in the proportion of non-right-handers among dyslexics, likely because of the increased proportion of dyslexics among pure left-handers. Dyslexics did not display precisely the same pattern of right and left responses as controls, with some differences at the extremes of the continuum. The present results provide empirical support for Annett's (1985) Right-Shift theory predictions. Additionally, the present study indicates that using a numerical scoring system or dichotomous classifications with restricted criteria that permit the measurement of several degrees of handedness appears to better determine hand preference than using broad classifications into handedness groups.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/34503
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