F. Morange-majoux et al., Organisation of left and right hand movement in a prehension task: A longitudinal study from 20 to 32 weeks, LATERALITY, 5(4), 2000, pp. 351-362
The organisation of reaching movements was studied longitudinally (every tw
o weeks) in infants aged from 20 to 32 weeks, in order to detect possible d
ifferences between the two hands. An object was presented on a table, at a
reachable distance, and four trials were retained. Analysis of left and rig
ht hand movements was performed, frame-by-frame, on video images obtained f
rom two cameras. Three body points were considered: the elbow, the wrist, a
nd the major finger for drawing the profile of the movement. Three paramete
rs were considered: movement time (MT), straightness, and number of changes
in direction. Data show that the right hand MT is always shorter than the
left hand MT. Moreover, the right hand is also continuously more directly o
riented towards the object and makes fewer corrective changes than the left
hand. These data show that a different organisation of movement of the lef
t and the right hand exists early in infancy.