The good news: as we get older, we become ambidextrous. The bad news:
this skill develops because the performance of our dominant hand
declines so drastically.



Researchers at Ruhr University Bochum
<http://www.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/index_en.htm>   in Germany and the
California Institute of Technology tested 60 volunteers who described
themselves as right-handed. The older the subject were, the less
successful they were at motor performance did not deteriorate as
drastically with age.

One would think that the dominant hand would resist degeneration better
than the other hand, says lead researcher Hubert R. Dinse
<http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/%7Eley/db/indices/a-tree/d/Dinse:Hub\
ert_R=.html>  , a biologist at Ruhr University Bochum. Because the
opposite is true, something must cause the decline. Dinse speculates it
may come down to simple wear and tear of the hand over time.

In a second experiment that tested hand usage, 36 subjects performed
household tasks at home while wearing sensors that detected which hand
was in motion at any given time. The sensors indicated that whereas the
younger subject preferred using their dominant hand, the older people
used both hand equally-without even knowing it.

"All subjects claimed that they were strict right-handers," says
Dinse, probably because they were used to describing themselves that way
and because they continued to write with their right hand.

To tease out why these changes take place, Dinse plans to use imaging
techniques to compare how cortical activation in the two brain
hemispheres changes with age. Previous research has shown that the left
hemisphere, which is responsible for the right hand, is more active in
young right-handed adults-so aging could induce either reduction in left
hemisphere activation or an enhancement in the right hemisphere.

Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>

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