With just 10% of the population being
left-handed, it can be easy for everyone else to forget we're living in a
right-handed world. But aside from making it tough to cut a straight line with
a pair of scissors designed for righties, being a southpaw can also have some
subtle effects on our physical and mental health.
The brains and bodies of lefties may
operate differently than those of right-handed people (and in mixed-handed
people, who may have different dominant hands for different tasks).
"Handedness seems to be determined very early on in fetal development,
when a lot of other things about your future are being determined as
well," says Ronald Yeo, PhD,
professor of psychology at the University of Texas-Austin.
Here's a look at some of the most common facts about being left-handed, and what it might really mean for your health.
Here's a look at some of the most common facts about being left-handed, and what it might really mean for your health.
IT'S NOT
JUST GENETICS
Scientists
aren't exactly sure why some people are left-handed, but they know that genes
are responsible about 25% of the time, says Yeo. Left-handedness does tend to
run in families, he says, "but noticeably less than other inherited
traits, like height or intelligence." In fact, identical twins, who share
the same genes, can sometimes have different dominant hands.
There are
plenty of theories on what else might determine which hand you write with, but
many experts believe that it's kind of random, says Yeo.
IT'S LINKED TO STRESS IN PREGNANCY
In one British study, the fetuses
of super-stressed pregnant women were
more likely to touch their faces more with their left hands than their right.
This could be the first signs of a left-handed child, say the researchers.
Other evidence supports that theory. In one 2008 Swedish study of moms and
their 5-year-old children, women who were depressed or stressed during their
pregnancies were more likely to have mixed- or left-handed kids. In
other studies, babies with low birth weight, or born to older mothers, were more likely to be lefties
as well.
IT'S MORE COMMON IN TWINS
Identical twins are sometimes
mirror images of each other--one twin has a mole on her right cheek and the
other has a mole in the same spot on her left cheek, for instance. It was once believed
that twins' genetic makeup should be "mirrored" as well--therefore,
one twin should be left-handed and the other should be right. (It was also once
thought that all left-handed people started out as twins, and that their
rightie siblings died in the womb.)
Neither of these is true, but left-handedness is about twice as common in twins than in the general population. A 1996 Belgian study found that about 21% of twins, both fraternal and identical, are left-handed.
Neither of these is true, but left-handedness is about twice as common in twins than in the general population. A 1996 Belgian study found that about 21% of twins, both fraternal and identical, are left-handed.
IT DOESN'T MAKE YOU "RIGHT-BRAINED"
Most
right-handed people use the left hemisphere of their brains to process
language, but that doesn't mean most lefties are
"right-brained"--that's just a common myth, says Gina Grimshaw, PhD,
director of the Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Laboratory at
the University of Wellington in New Zealand.
About 98%
of right-handers are left-brained, she says, but so are about 70% of
left-handers. Only about 30% are right-brained or bilateral-brained (in which
both halves are equally capable). "Most left-handers seem to have similar
language processing to right-handers," Grimshaw says. For other one-sided
brain functions, such as attention, emotion, music, and face perception, she
says, there are less data. "But for the most part, left-handers do not
differ obviously from right-handers. They certainly don't have reversed
brains."
IT MAY CAUSE YOU TO THINK DIFFERENTLY
Society
tends to associate the left side of something with the bad ("two left
feet"), and the right side with the good ("my right-hand man").
But if you're left-handed, you might not think the same way as righties,
according to a 2009 Stanford University study.
Participants
were shown two columns of abstract illustrations and asked which seemed more
intelligent, happy, honest, and attractive. Righties were more likely to choose
the illustrations in the right column, while lefties were more likely to choose
the drawings in the left column.
"For
left-handed people, implicitly, they think good stuff is on the left and bad
stuff is on the right, even though consciously, explicitly, everything in
language and culture is telling them the exact opposite," the study's lead
author said in a press release. He believes this may even influence the way we
vote on ballots, or which candidates we prefer when watching presidential
debates.
IT CAN AFFECT SCHOOL PERFORMANCE
In a 2009 study of children 11
and younger, Australian researchers found that left-handed kidsperformed worse than
right-handers in several measures, including vocabulary, reading, writing,
social development, and gross and fine motor skills. Mixed-handed kids
performed even worse than lefties.
Mixed-handed and left-handed children are more likely to use the two halves of their brains in unusual ways, which may put them at risk for mild learning disabilities, says Yeo. At the same time, however, some mixed-handed kids have an unrelated learning disability that's making them struggle to decide which hand to write with. Either way, most kids catch up with their classmates as they get older, he says--being left-handed or mixed-handed isn't a surefire predictor of how well kids perform as they grow up.
Mixed-handed and left-handed children are more likely to use the two halves of their brains in unusual ways, which may put them at risk for mild learning disabilities, says Yeo. At the same time, however, some mixed-handed kids have an unrelated learning disability that's making them struggle to decide which hand to write with. Either way, most kids catch up with their classmates as they get older, he says--being left-handed or mixed-handed isn't a surefire predictor of how well kids perform as they grow up.
IT'S LINKED TO A RISK OF MENTAL HEALTH PROBLEMS
People who are left-handed are at
greater risk of psychotic disorders such
as schizophrenia, according to a 2013 Yale University study. When researchers
polled patients at a mental-health clinic, 40% of those with schizophrenia or
schizoaffective said they wrote with their left hand; that's considerably
higher than the 10% of lefties found in the general population. Studies have
also found links between non-right-handedness and dyslexia, attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder, and some mood disorders.
IT DOES OFFER AN ADVANTAGE IN SPORTS
There's
one thing that most handedness experts can agree on: lefties have the upper
hand (pun intended) when it comes to one-on-one sports like tennis, boxing, and
pitching a baseball. In his book The Puzzle of Left-Handedness,
linguist Rik Smits explains that athletes, (left- and right-handed) usually
train against right-handed opponents.
When
finally facing a southpaw, lefties can easily adjust--but righties are at a
double disadvantage. "They're forced to engage in an asymmetrical battle
for which they're poorly prepared, against an opponent who's a dab hand at
dealing with this type of asymmetry," he writes.
IT MAY MAKE FOR BETTER FIGHTERS
In a 2005 French study,
researchers found that southpaws made up just about 3% of the
population in the most peaceful primitive societies, but 27% in the most
warlike ones. Why? It goes back to the idea that lefties have a physical
advantage over righties. In violent societies, researchers theorize,
left-handers benefit from their unexpected left hook.
IT DOESN'T MAKE YOU MORE CREATIVE
Left-handed
people are often credited with being more creative than righties, but that's a
hard thing to measure, says Yeo. That rumor may come from a 1995 study that
found left-handed men tended to engage in more "divergent thinking" than right-handed
men--meaning they explore more options to solve a problem than the ones readily
available. (For women, however, handedness made no difference.)
"There's
a grain of truth to the creativity idea, but when you look at actual creative achievements in
one's lifetime, the evidence is not strong for association with left-handedness,"
says Yeo.
IT DOESN'T MEAN YOU'RE ARTSY
Southpaws
also have a reputation for being introverted and artsy, says Grimshaw.
"It's an interesting contrast to views from a few decades ago or before,
that stereotyped left-handers as somehow mentally or morally inferior,"
she says. "However, the stereotype doesn't reflect reality."
In a 2013
study, Grimshaw and her colleagues found no difference between left- and
right-handed people on any of the five personality measures they tested. They
did, however, find that mixed-handers were more introverted.
IT'S LINKED TO A HIGHER RISK OF BREAST CANCER
Left-handedness
seems to be associated with some physical health issues. In a 2007 study
published in the British Journal of Cancer, researchers found that left-handers
had a higher risk of breast cancer than right-handers, especially for cancer
that occurred after menopause.
While the
two seem completely unrelated, Yeo says that both could be the result of
something affecting a fetus in early development.
"We
know that other physical vulnerabilities, like low birth weight and prenatal
head circumference, can predict later health issues," he says. "How
you develop in utero may put you on a trajectory for certain strengths and
weaknesses for your entire life."
IT DOESN'T AFFECT YOUR GENERAL HEALTH
Scientists
long suspected that being left-handed was somehow related to immune function,
and that it may be a risk factor for an autoimmune disorder. Research has not
been able to back up most of these claims, says Grimshaw, and that theory has
been largely debunked. But one autoimmune condition handedness does seem to be
associated with is inflammatory bowel disease. A 2001 British study found that
lefties are twice as likely to suffer from bowel problems such as Crohn's
disease and ulcerative colitis than righties.
IT'S LINKED TO SOME SLEEP PROBLEMS
Southpaws may be more prone to
periodic limb movement disorder (PLMD), which causes
patients to involuntarily kick and jerk their arms and legs while sleeping. In
a 2011 University of Toledo survey of 100 sleep clinic patients, researchers
found that 69% of right-handers experienced limb movements on both sides of
their body while sleeping. As for the left-handed patients, 94% of them had
these movements. "Their findings indicate that left-handed people have
significantly higher chances of having bilateral limb movements, indicating the
potential for PLMD," states a press release from the 2011 conference where
the study was presented.
IT MAY HELP PROTECT AGAINST ULCERS AND ARTHRITIS
Being
left-handed isn't all bad, health-wise. A 2005 study published in the journal
Laterality found that being left-handed was linked to lower rates of arthritis and ulcers.
"The
most likely explanation to me is that both handedness and disease risk depend
on the interaction of hundreds of genes--we've mostly given up on the idea that
one or two genes explain any of these things--and they have some of those genes
in common," says Grimshaw. "But we don't currently know what those
are; this is currently an area of active research."
IT DOESN'T IMPACT LONGEVITY
It was
once thought that left-handed people were doomed to die earlier than their
"normal" peers, thanks to a 1991 study from the University of British
Columbia. (The study also found that car accidents were often to blame, so
lefties also took on the reputation for being bad drivers.)
But
several studies since have debunked those claims, and scientists now generally
accept that being a rightie or a leftie has zero effect on lifespan.
IT MAY UP THE RISK OF PTSD
A 2007
Scottish study found that left-handers were more likely to display symptoms of
post-traumatic stress disorder after watching clips from a scary movie. Other
studies have found that non-right-handers experience more negative emotions.
Both findings could be due to the fact that non-righties are more likely to
have unusual brain lateralization, which could affect the way their brains
process fear and anger.
IT DOESN'T MAKE YOU A BIGGER DRINKER
Many
small studies have suggested that lefties drink more than righties, but
scientists weren't sure why. They guessed that the unusual way lefties use the
two sides of their brains made them more prone to alcoholism, or that lefties
just drank more to deal with the stress of being a minority in a right-handed
world.
So a 2011
study published in the British Journal of Psychological Health examined the
issue on a large scale, using self-reported data from more than 27,000 people.
They found that left-handers did tend to drink more often, but mainly because
they were "less likely to drink rarely (less than once a month) or not at
all." In other words, lefties weren't more likely to binge drink or become
alcoholics. "There is no reason to believe that it is associated with
excessive alcohol consumption or risky drinking," the authors wrote.
IT MIGHT MEAN YOU EARN LESS MONEY
Whether
the cognitive, mental, and physical differences lefties have from righties
actually make a real-world difference in people's lives is still up for
debate--but a 2014 Harvard study suggests that they might. Researcher Joshua
Goodman found that left-handed people'ssalaries were, on average, 9 to 19% lower
than their right-handed peers. (The gap between lefties and righties was $2,500
for men and $3,400 for women.)
He also
found that left-handers were more likely to not attend or to drop out of
college, and to work in less cognitively demanding jobs, like manual labor.
"When people ask me for the takeaway message, I tell them that it makes me
pay a little extra attention to my kids as they develop their handedness,"
Goodman said in a press release. "And if they turn out to be left-handed, I won't
worry, but will keep an eye out for some of these other things."
OVERALL, HANDEDNESS DOESN'T REALLY MATTER
Of all
the interesting facts about handedness, probably the most important one, says
Yeo, is that it doesn't matter much at all. "The differences between
righties and lefties are really rather subtle, and of much greater scientific
interest than any kind of practical use," he says.
Grimshaw
agrees, noting that mixed-handers seem to differ from "strong
handers," much more than left- and right-handers differ from each other.
"However, we really don't know much about the brains of mixed-handers,
because we've been so focused on the left-handers," she says.
"Hopefully we'll have a better understanding of them soon."
One thing
is for sure, Yeo says: We shouldn't assume much about people's personalities or
health just because of the hand they write with. And we certainly shouldn't
worry about lefties' chances of success
By Amanda MacMillan
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