“…For example, the dichotomy of visually guided reaching versus manipulative behavior for the left and right hands, respectively, would be difficult to maintain had the authors incorporated the findings of Ettlinger and colleagues in which a left hand preference was observed in monkeys for haptic perception involving manipulative behavior (see target article, Footnote #1). This left-hand haptic preference is not dissimilar to that observed for right-handed children as young as 2-years-old, who showed more accurate perception of objects palpated with the left hand, than with the right, which is considered to be a manifestation of right-hemisphere specialization for form perception (Rose 1984). The findings of Ettlinger and colleagues, and the results of the other studies of hand preferences in nonhuman primates, are all consistent with right-hemisphere specialization in monkeys for aspects of form and space perception, with the left-hand preference for the activities that draw on these processes being a result, or a reflection, of the contralateral hemisphere's functional specialization.…”