Abstract
It was hypothesized that the relative superiority of the non-dominant hand movements during late evening could arise from a more pronounced homeostatic deactivation of the left hemisphere. We tested such hypothesis collecting motor activity before and after prolonged wakefulness. Fifty-one right-handed subjects wore actigraphs on both left and right wrist for three consecutive days (baseline-sleep deprivation-sleep recovery). We replicated higher motor activity in left hand respect to the right hand at 22:00 and 23:00 h, but only in baseline condition. The results provide the evidence that circadian motor asymmetries do not seem to express homeostatic processes.
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