Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 February 2010
This is a welcome attempt to seek common biological principles underlying laterality in animals and humans. I do not think it is wholly convincing, but this is partly because many of the results from nonhuman species are not yet firmly established or understood. I suspect that the author's characterization of lateralization, with the left hemisphere supposedly specialized for communicative functions and the right for spatial and affective functions, will require modification. For instance, it now seems fairly clear that the left hemisphere in humans plays a general role in the production and perception of sequences not restricted to communicative acts (Craig 1980; Kimura 1979), and indeed some of the examples of left-hemispheric specialization listed in Table 2 are not obviously communicative. Even so, there are some fairly striking parallels between humans and nonhumans with respect to the pattern of lateralization, and one suspects that common principles are operating. At the same time, in the enthusiastic search for functional asymmetries, we should not overlook the striking degree of bilateral symmetry that characterizes the brains of all animals, including humans.