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单词 handedness
释义

Definition of handedness in English:

handedness

noun ˈhandɪdnəsˈhandidˌnis
mass noun
  • The tendency to use either the right or the left hand more naturally than the other.

    右撇子(或左撇子)倾向

    injury has forced him to change his handedness
    Example sentencesExamples
    • A major problem faced in studies of a complex trait such as handedness concerns the criteria used to define a person's handedness.
    • 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.
    • We did not feel that it was justified to include handedness as a covariate in our ANCOVA analysis.
    • Rather, the R gene dictates nonrandom distribution of handedness and whorling traits only with respect to the left-right body axis.
    • To further probe for a biological basis of handedness, the researchers examined handedness among pairs of chimp siblings.
    • But this is hardly a definitive answer to the question of handedness.
    • 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.
    • Reversed handedness among fossil polychaete jaws was recently described by Bergman.
    • So I wondered, what do people think about the left brain/right brain divide, and in particular in relation to handedness?
    • Even so, I firmly believe that the consequences of handedness can provide a credible basis for our emergent freedom.
    • There appears to be no strong correlation to the person's handedness.
    • Another mutation, inv, causes the complete reversal of handedness in mice; the inv gene codes for a protein containing ankyrin repeats, which suggests an involvement with the cytoskeleton.
    • Nearly all right-handers are left-brained for language, suggesting that the D allele controls both handedness and brain dominance for language.
    • In a study involving 93 people, they found a strong statistical connection between handedness and cerebral dopamine asymmetries.
    • Various statistics, such as identical twins with different handedness, have blown most genetic theories.
    • It's no wonder that psychologists adopted the view that handedness is (at least partially) a learned behavior.
    • Although microscopic jaw structures and reversed handedness are not the primary focus of this study, some observations are nevertheless noteworthy.
    • For instance, handedness is not a socially learned behaviour.
    • Our approach in the 2002 paper was an analysis of covariance, with age and handedness (both of which had significant effects) as covariates.
    • But as long as our understanding of the origin and character of handedness remains clouded, its implications for the nature and ontological status of space will also remain somewhat obscure.

Definition of handedness in US English:

handedness

nounˈhandidˌnis
  • The tendency to use either the right or the left hand more naturally than the other.

    右撇子(或左撇子)倾向

    injury has forced him to change his handedness
    Example sentencesExamples
    • 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.
    • A major problem faced in studies of a complex trait such as handedness concerns the criteria used to define a person's handedness.
    • Our approach in the 2002 paper was an analysis of covariance, with age and handedness (both of which had significant effects) as covariates.
    • Another mutation, inv, causes the complete reversal of handedness in mice; the inv gene codes for a protein containing ankyrin repeats, which suggests an involvement with the cytoskeleton.
    • Nearly all right-handers are left-brained for language, suggesting that the D allele controls both handedness and brain dominance for language.
    • We did not feel that it was justified to include handedness as a covariate in our ANCOVA analysis.
    • Although microscopic jaw structures and reversed handedness are not the primary focus of this study, some observations are nevertheless noteworthy.
    • For instance, handedness is not a socially learned behaviour.
    • But this is hardly a definitive answer to the question of handedness.
    • It's no wonder that psychologists adopted the view that handedness is (at least partially) a learned behavior.
    • 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.
    • To further probe for a biological basis of handedness, the researchers examined handedness among pairs of chimp siblings.
    • Even so, I firmly believe that the consequences of handedness can provide a credible basis for our emergent freedom.
    • There appears to be no strong correlation to the person's handedness.
    • So I wondered, what do people think about the left brain/right brain divide, and in particular in relation to handedness?
    • Reversed handedness among fossil polychaete jaws was recently described by Bergman.
    • Various statistics, such as identical twins with different handedness, have blown most genetic theories.
    • In a study involving 93 people, they found a strong statistical connection between handedness and cerebral dopamine asymmetries.
    • But as long as our understanding of the origin and character of handedness remains clouded, its implications for the nature and ontological status of space will also remain somewhat obscure.
    • 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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更新时间:2024/11/11 10:49:01