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    Article

    The left cerebral hemisphere may be dominant for the control of bimanual symmetric reach-to-grasp movements

    Previous research has established that the left cerebral hemisphere is dominant for the control of continuous bimanual movements. The lateralisation of motor control for discrete bimanual movements, in contras...

    Jarrod Blinch, Jason W. Flindall, Łukasz Smaga in Experimental Brain Research (2019)

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    Article

    Hear speech, change your reach: changes in the left-hand grasp-to-eat action during speech processing

    Research has shown that the kinematic characteristics of right-hand movements change when executed during both speech production and processing. Despite the variety of prehension and manual actions used to exa...

    Nicole A. van Rootselaar, Jason W. Flindall in Experimental Brain Research (2018)

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    Article

    Kinematics of ventrally mediated grasp-to-eat actions: right-hand advantage is dependent on dorsal stream input

    Studies have suggested a left-hemisphere specialization for visually guided grasp-to-eat actions by way of task-dependent kinematic asymmetries (i.e., smaller maximum grip apertures for right-handed grasp-to-e...

    Clarissa Beke, Jason W. Flindall, Claudia L. R. Gonzalez in Experimental Brain Research (2018)

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    Article

    The inimitable mouth: task-dependent kinematic differences are independent of terminal precision

    Previous studies in our lab have described kinematic difference between grasp-to-eat and grasp-to-place movements, whereby participants produce smaller maximum grip apertures (MGAs) when gras** to bring the ...

    Jason W. Flindall, Claudia L. R. Gonzalez in Experimental Brain Research (2017)