Family handedness as a predictor of mental rotation ability among minority girls in a math-science training program. |
| |
Authors: | M B Casey D Colón Y Goris |
| |
Affiliation: | Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02167. |
| |
Abstract: | Right-handed girls from nonright-handed families outperformed the other groups of minority adolescent girls enrolled in a science and technology program on a test of mental rotation ability. This target group excelled over right-handed girls with all right-handed relatives and nonright-handers. The pattern of group differences in mental rotation ability found here is consistent with those found for women with math-science training at the college level. The minority boys in the program outperformed the girls as a whole, but did not differ significantly from the right-handed girls with nonright-handed relatives. The present findings provide further support for the generality of Annett's genetic theory of handedness and brain organization, and for the interaction of genetic and environmental factors in accounting for individual differences in mental rotation ability. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|