Findings on nonprimate mammals place the issue of mother-infant lateralized relations in a broader context, demonstrating that humans are one of many species showing this feature. The remarkable interspecies consistency in the direction of lateralization points to a continuity between lateralized mother-infant interactions in primates and nonprimate mammals and suggests ancient evolutionary roots of human cradling bias. The results from species which, in contrast to primates, have no direct involvement of forelimbs in mother-infant spatial interactions clearly support the perceptual origin of this type of lateralization. A right hemisphere advantage for social functions relevant to mother-infant interactions is the most probable background for the left-sided biases in the behavior of mothers and infants. Recent findings suggest the contribution of lateralized mother-infant interactions to biological fitness. Mother and infant both can gain advantage from keeping the other on the left side.
Translated title of the contributionЛатерализованное социальное поведение матери и потомства у различных видов млекопитающих
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCEREBRAL LATERALIZATION AND COGNITION: EVOLUTIONARY AND DEVELOPMENTAL INVESTIGATIONS OF BEHAVIORAL BIASES
EditorsGillian S. Forrester, William D. Hopkins, Kristelle Hudry, Annukka Lindell
PublisherElsevier
Chapter5
Pages115-141
Number of pages27
Volume238
ISBN (Print)9780128146712
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018

Publication series

NameProgress in Brain Research
Volume238
ISSN (Print)0079-6123
ISSN (Electronic)1875-7855

    Research areas

  • Cradling bias, Hemispheric asymmetry, Holding bias, Lateralization in wild mammals, Left eye bias, Maternal monitoring of infant state, Mother–child relations, Nipple preference, RECOGNITION, Mother-child relations, ADVANTAGES, CRADLING BIAS, ASYMMETRIES, EVOLUTION, LEFT-SIDE, NIPPLE PREFERENCES, RIGHT-HEMISPHERE, BRAIN, NEWBORN-INFANTS

    Scopus subject areas

  • Neuroscience(all)

ID: 33266099