A study reveals that left-handed people show greater competitive drive than right-handed people, which could give them an advantage.
New research suggests left-handed people may be more competitive than right-handers, offering clues to an evolutionary advantage.
A recent study suggests that left-handed people have an advantage in competitive contexts, while righties tend to cooperate better. Thank “evolutionarily stable strategy” for the mix. A study ...
THE LEFT-HANDED have long struggled in a right-handed world. But they are over-represented in one field: one-to-one sports such as fencing and tennis. The conventional explanation for this is that the ...
Approximately 10.6 per cent of people are left-handed, and this minority may just have a psychological edge over right-handers in competition, new research suggests. This edge is now believed to be ...
Whenever I give an interview about scientific research on left-handedness, at one point or another, the interviewer will ask the question of what things left-handers have an advantage in over ...
Picture this: You're signing a credit card receipt at the bank, using one of those pens attached to a short chain. As a ...
Both left-handedness and breast cancer are affected by sex hormones, and some studies suggested a link. Others, however, did not. A meta-analysis weighed the evidence.