“…Now, since, in humans, different kinds of behavioral, functional or anatomical asymmetries have been detected for each stage of this interaction between the brain and the body, these asymmetries could also be present in animals. The second (more factual) reason is that while asymmetries in emotional communication equivalent to those observed in humans have been documented only in primates (e.g., [9,36,49,79,80,82,83], see reviews in [10,11]), and in few other social mammals, such as domestic pigs [15], asymmetries concerning the brain-body interactions have also been documented in animals belonging to more primitive levels of phylogenetic evolution. Furthermore, it must be noted that in animal behavior research, a distinction must be made between a cue and a communicatory signal, because an outward behavior stemming from an emotional response to a situation does not need to serve a communicative meaning.…”