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Why aren't we all ambidextrous?

CrowdScience

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The Role of Genetics in Handedness

Right-handed people have had the upper hand all the way back to the stone age and this preference seems to start really early on babies in the womb are usually seen sucking the thumb of what will turn out to be their dominant hand. Not a single gene that determines whether you're left or right handedness but there is a huge number of genes that plays a role, most of them related to brain development. David: Wouldn't it be better for everyone if we were all good at using both of our hands for everything? Sebastian: Is this handedness phenomenon genetic so we know it is to some extent definitely genetic but it is not completely genetic?"

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