“…1999), the eye used to inspect the environment for feeding or checking for potential predators (Rogers, 2000;Rogers, Zucca, & Vallortigara, 2004), the side of body presented to peers (Jennings, 2012;Krakauer et al, 2016), or the direction of movement when catching prey (e.g., Kurvers et al, 2017), escaping from predators (e.g., De Santi, Sovrano, Bisazza, & Vallortigara, 2001), or coordinating with conspecifics (e.g., Frasnelli, Iakovlev, & Reznikova, 2012). In some cases, lateralization offers cognitive benefits to individuals: It spares neuronal tissue (Levy, 1969), preventing the simultaneous initiation of incompatible responses (Andrew, Mench, & Rainey, 1982;Cantalupo, Vila Pouca, & Brow, 1995), and facilitates separate and parallel processing in the two hemispheres (Rogers et al, 2004).…”