“…For example, TMT increased bilaterally after a brief restraint event ( bushbabies : Hanbury et al, 2011 ), whereas a right-side dominance was seen after longer intervals ( marmosets : Pereira et al, 2019 ) or recurring episodes ( marmosets : Tomaz et al, 2003 ). On the other hand, brief exposures to a predator model were asymmetrically processed by the right hemisphere ( marmosets : Hook-Costigan and Rogers, 1998 ; Souza Silva et al, 2007 ; Pereira et al, 2018 ), but the response to a food-retrieval task associated with a predatory stimulus was blunted by unilateral lesions on either side ( macaques : Izquierdo and Murray, 2004 ). When processing emotionally-laden stimuli, aspects other than event duration may contribute to the variability in functional hemisphere bias, or even lack thereof, including the type of stimulus (e.g., restraint vs. predatory stress), species (e.g., response to unfamiliar human by marmosets vs. macaques; Izquierdo and Murray, 2004 ; Pereira et al, 2018 ) and trait-like characteristics (e.g., fearful temperament; Kalin et al, 1998 ).…”