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Hemispheric dominance has its origins in the control of the midline organs of speech
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 216-217
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Right-handedness may have come first: Evidence from studies in human infants and nonhuman primates
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 217-218
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Pumping for gestural origins: The well may be rather dry
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 218-219
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Possible phylogenies: The role of hypotheses, weak inferences, and falsification
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 219-220
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Handedness: Neutral or adaptive?
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- 02 October 2003, p. 220
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Are human gestures in the present time a mere vestige of a former sign language? Probably not
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 220-221
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Unbalanced human apes and syntax
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 221-222
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Work and talk – handedness and the stuff of life
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 222-223
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Was a manual gesturing stage really necessary?
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 223-224
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Brodmann's area 44, gestural communication, and the emergence of right handedness in chimpanzees
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 224-225
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The hand leads the mouth in ontogenesis too
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 225-226
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Mirror neurons, Broca's area and language: Reflecting on the evidence
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 226-227
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Dual asymmetries in handedness
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 227-228
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What functional imaging of the human brain can tell about handedness and language
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 228-229
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From mouth to mouth and hand to hand: On language evolution
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 229-230
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From past to present: Speech, gesture, and brain in present-day human communication
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 230-231
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The secret of lateralisation is trust
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 231-232
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Integration of visual and vocal communication: Evidence for Miocene origins
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 232-233
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Mouth to hand and back again? Could language have made those journeys?
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 233-234
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Ontogenetic constraints on the evolution of right-handedness
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- 02 October 2003, pp. 234-235
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