Abstract

The ability to distinguish left from right has been shown to vary substantially within healthy individuals, yet its characteristics and mechanisms are poorly understood. In three experiments, we focused on a detailed description of the ability to distinguish left from right and the role of individual differences, and further explored the potential underlying mechanisms. In Experiment 1, a questionnaire concerning self-reported left-right identification (LRI) and strategy use was administered. Objective assessment was used in Experiment 2 by means of vocal responses to line drawings of a figure, with the participants' hands in a spatially neutral position. In Experiment 3, the arm positions and visibility of the hands were manipulated to assess whether bodily posture influences left-right decisions. Results indicate that 14.6% of the general population reported insufficient LRI and that 42.9% of individuals use a hand-related strategy. Furthermore, we found that spatial alignment of the participants' arms with the stimuli increased performance, in particular with a hand-related strategy and females. Performance was affected only by the layout of the stimuli, not by the position of the participant during the experiment. Taken together, confusion about left and right occurs within healthy population to a limited extent, and a hand-related strategy affects LRI. Moreover, the process involved appears to make use of a stored body representation and not bottom-up sensory input. Therefore, we suggest a top-down body representation is the key mechanism in determining left and right, even when this is not explicitly part of the task.

Highlights

  • The phenomenon of confusing left and right is generally perceived to occur commonly in healthy individuals

  • We focused on creating a detailed description of the phenomenon and the role of individual differences, for both subjective and objective measures, and further explored the potential underlying mechanisms

  • We focused on subjective measures of left–right identification (LRI) ability

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Summary

Introduction

The phenomenon of confusing left and right is generally perceived to occur commonly in healthy individuals. A brief questionnaire sent out to 790 physicians and their spouses showed that 17.5% of females and 8.8% of males reported at least “frequent” problems with quickly identifying left and right. This was followed up by Harris and Gitterman (1978), who included both gender and handedness as factors in their analyses. In 364 university faculty members, they established that 44.7% of females and 15.8% of males experience difficulty in quickly identifying left from right at least “occasionally.” They found that difficulty was higher for left handers, for females in particular These effects of gender and handedness were confirmed in later studies

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