News

Straight Arrow News on MSN23hOpinion
Study says lefties aren't more creative after all
For decades, popular belief has held that left-handed people are more creative than their right-handed peers. But is that ...
New research challenges the myth that left-handers are more creative, showing righties may lead in key creative fields.
The long-standing belief that left-handed people are more creative has been challenged by a new meta-analysis of over a ...
I can usually drink a bottle of wine and not feel anything. But after I noticed the lump in my neck, I realised I was getting ...
What do Leonardo da Vinci, M.C. Escher and Jimi Hendrix have in common? They're just a few of the creative geniuses also ...
As soon as I sat down on the electric wheelchair, researchers plunked a helmet on my head with electron conductors that dug ...
"I feel like maybe a couple, few more months, and I won't have my left hand either," the 'Grey's Anatomy' alum said, adding that he worried about losing the use of his legs, in a sobering interview ...
For most right-handed people, the left hemisphere of the brain is dominant for language and logical tasks, while the right hemisphere handles spatial awareness and emotional processing.
"People who are left-handed or ambidextrous often don’t have such a dominant one-sided brain — rather, the key portions of language can be divided between both sides," Murray also said.
According to a second-order meta-analysis involving over 202,000 individuals, people with atypical hand preference—meaning left- or mixed-handedness—are significantly more likely to have ...
Even in casual conversation, someone inevitably brings up how left-handed people are “just wired differently” with a knowing nod. But hold on to your pencils, folks.
Most people who are right-handed are left hemisphere dominant, and the right hemisphere would typically be responsible for processing surroundings and facial awareness,” she says.