Dictionary Definition
left-handed adj
1 using or intended for the lefts hand;
"left-handed golfers need left-handed clubs"; "left-handed
scissors" [ant: ambidextrous, right-handed]
2 (of marriages) illicit or informal; "in
Colonial America left-handed marriages between Frenchmen and
Indians were frequent"
3 (of marriages) of a marriage between one of
royal or noble birth and one of lower rank; valid but with the
understanding that the rank of the inferior remains unchanged and
offspring do not succeed to titles or property of the superior
[syn: morganatic]
4 rotating to the left [syn: levorotary, levorotatory]
5 ironically ambiguous; "a left-handed
compliment"
6 not skillful in physical movement especially
with the hands; "a bumbling mechanic"; "a bungling performance";
"ham-handed governmental interference"; "could scarcely empty a
scuttle of ashes, so handless was the poor creature"- Mary H. Vorse
[syn: bumbling,
bungling, butterfingered, ham-fisted,
ham-handed,
handless, heavy-handed]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
lefthanded- Alternative spelling of left-handed
Extensive Definition
Left-handedness is the preference for the left
hand over the right for everyday activities such as writing. Most
left-handed people favor their right hand for some activities, and
many exhibit some degree of ambidexterity.
Left-handedness is relatively uncommon; over 90% of the adult
population is right-handed.
Being left-handed can be advantageous in some sports and games,
although sometimes special equipment is required. Some everyday
items such as scissors
and other tools also have left-handed variants.
Demographics
In 1998, a study suggested that approximately 7 to 10 percent of the adult population was left-handed. Studies indicate that left-handedness is more common in males than females. Left-handedness, in comparison to the general population, also appears to occur more frequently in both identical and fraternal twins, and several groups of individuals with neurological disorders (such as people with epilepsy, Down's Syndrome, autism, mental retardation and dyslexia). Statistically, the identical twin of a left-handed person has a 76 percent chance of being left-handed, identifying the cause(s) as partly genetic and partly environmental.Causes of left-handedness
- Hand orientation is developed in unborn children, most commonly determined by observing which hand is predominantly licked or held close to the mouth. Current genetic research suggests there is a genetic factor involved.
- In 2007, researchers discovered LRRTM1, the first gene linked to increased odds of being left-handed. The researchers also claim that possessing this gene slightly raises the risk of psychotic mental illnesses such as schizophrenia.
- Long-term impairment of the right hand: People with long-term impairment of the right hand are more likely to become left-handed, even after their right hand heals. Such long term impairment is defined as 8 months or more.
- Testosterone: Exposure to higher rates of testosterone before birth can lead to a left-handed child. This is the Geschwind theory, named after the neurologist who proposed it, Norman Geschwind. It suggests that variations in levels of testosterone during pregnancy shape the development of the fetal brain. Testosterone suppresses the growth of the left cerebral hemisphere and so more neurons migrate to the right hemisphere. The highly developed right hemisphere is now better suited to function as the center of language and handedness. The fetus is more likely to become left-handed, since the right hemisphere controls the left half of the body. The theory goes on to tie the exposure to higher levels of testosterone and the resultant right-hemisphere dominance to auto-immune disorders, learning disorders, dyslexia, and stuttering, as well as increased spatial ability.
- Ultrasound theory: Ultrasound scans may affect the brain of unborn children, causing higher rates of left-handedness in children born to mothers who have ultrasound scans compared to those who do not. This is probably based on a few studies where this relation is studied. In one of these the authors claim that "...we found a possible association between routine ultrasonography in utero and subsequent non-right handedness among children in primary school." However later in the same article the authors state that "Thus the association ... may be due to chance" and "The result was not significant, suggesting that the study had insufficient statistical power to resolve the relationship between ultrasonography and subsequent left handedness in the child"
Social stigma and repression of left-handedness
Negative associations of left-handedness in language
There are many colloquial terms used to refer to a left-handed person. Some are just slang or jargon words, while others may be offensive or demeaning, either in context or in origin. In more technical contexts, 'sinistral' may be used in place of 'left-handed' and 'sinistrality' in place of 'left-handedness'. Both of these technical terms derive from sinister, a Latin word meaning 'left'.Some left-handed people consider themselves
oppressed, even to the point of prejudice. Etymology often
lends weight to the argument:
In Hebrew,
as well as in other ancient Semitic
and Mesopotamian
languages, the term "hand" was a symbol of power or custody. The
left hand symbolized the power to shame society, and was used as a
metaphor for misfortune, natural
evil, or punishment from the gods. This metaphor survived
ancient culture and was integrated into mainstream Christianity
by early Catholic theologians as Ambrose of
Milan to modern Protestant
theologians such as
Karl
Barth to attribute natural evil
to God in
explaining God's omnipotence over the
universe.
Meanings evolved from use of these terms in the
ancient languages. In many European languages, "right" is not only
a synonym for correctness, but also stands for authority and
justice: German
and Dutch
recht, French
droit, Spanish
derecho; in most Slavic
languages the root prav is used in words carrying meanings of
correctness or justice. Being right-handed has also historically
been thought of as being skillful: the Latin word
for right-handed is dexter, as in dexterity; indeed, the Spanish
term diestro and the Italian's
destro, mean both "right-handed" and "skillful". In Irish, "deas"
means "right side" and "nice". "Ciotóg" is the left hand and is
related to "ciotach" meaning "awkward"; in French, "gauche" means
"left" and is also a synonym of "maladroit", meaning "clumsy". Same
for the Italian "maldestro" and the Dutch word "links".
Meanwhile, the English word sinister comes from
the Latin word sinister, which originally meant "left" but took on
meanings of "evil" or "unlucky" by the Classical
Latin era. Alternatively, sinister comes from the Latin word
sinus meaning "pocket": a traditional Roman toga had only one pocket, located
on the left side for the convenience of a right-handed wearer. The
contemporary Italian
word sinistra has both meanings of sinister and left. The Spanish
siniestra has both, too, although the 'left' meaning is less common
and is usually expressed by izquierda, a Basque
word. In Portuguese,
the most common word for left-handed person, canhoto, was once used
to identify the devil, and canhestro, a related word, means
"clumsy".
The left side is often associated with
awkwardness and clumsiness. The Dutch expression "twee linkerhanden
hebben" and the Bulgarian expression "dve levi ratse" ("to have two
left hands") both mean being clumsy. The English phrase, to have
"two left feet" means to be bad at dancing. As these are all very
old words/phrases, they support theories indicating that the
predominance of right-handedness is an extremely old
phenomenon.
In ancient China, the left has been the "bad"
side. The adjective "left" (左 Mandarin:
zuǒ) means "improper" or "out of accord". For instance, the phrase
"left path" (左道 Mandarin: zuǒdao) stands for illegal or immoral
means.
In Norwegian,
the expression venstrehåndsarbeid (left-hand work) means "something
that is done in a sloppy or unsatisfactory way". Additionally, one
of the Norwegian words for left-handed, "keivhendt", comes from
Norwegian words meaning wrong handed or not straight handed.
The Hungarian
word balfácán means twit. (Bal means left and fácán is for
pheasant.) Other synonyms are balfék and balek. However all these
are euphemistic versions of the original vulgar word balfasz,
combining "bal" and the vulgar name of the male genitals
fasz.
In Ireland
left handedness is called a "ciotógach" (kitt-oog) which is
Irish
for left-handed. It is frequently used amongst native Irish people,
eg. "she gave him a slap of the ciotógach after he insulted her at
the bar" the word ciotógach is not derogatory and is held with
affection amongst left handed people.
In some parts of the English-speaking world
'cack-handed' is slang for left-handed. The origin of this term is
disputed, but some suggest it is derived from the Latin cacare, in
reference to the habit of performing ablutions with the left hand,
leaving the right hand 'clean'. However, other source suggest that
it is derived from the Old Norse word keikr, meaning "bent
backwards".
The common Australian slang for a left-handed
individual is the term Molly-Dooker, whose origins cannot be
ascertained for certain, but whose intention is overwhelming
clear.
Amongst Muslims, and in some
societies including India, it is
customary to use the left hand for cleaning oneself with water
after defecating. The right hand is commonly known in
contradistinction from the left, as the hand used for eating.
Even the word "ambidexterity" reflects
the bias. Its intended meaning is, "skillful on both sides".
However, since it keeps the Latin root "dexter",
which means "right", it ends up conveying the idea of being
"right-handed at both sides". This bias is also apparent in the
lesser-known antonym
"ambisinistrous", which means "clumsy on both sides" and derives
from the Latin root "sinister."
In Esperanto, the
word "left" is rendered maldekstra, literally meaning "opposite of
right." A left-handed person is a maldekstrulo. The prefix mal-
does not mean "bad", but simply "opposite"; in fact, "generous"
translates as malavara, meaning "opposite of greedy." A neologism
liva was not accepted by the speakers.
In Russian,
"to stray left" is a euphemism for being unfaithful to a spouse or
partner.
Southpaw
A left-handed individual may be known as a southpaw, particularly in a sports context. It is widely accepted that the term originated in the United States, in the game of baseball. Ballparks are often designed so that right-handed batters are facing east, so that the afternoon or evening sun does not shine in their eyes. This means that left-handed pitchers are throwing with their south-side arm. However, the Oxford English Dictionary lists a non-baseball citation for "south paw", meaning a punch with the left hand, as early as 1848, just three years after the first organized baseball game.In boxing, someone who boxes
left-handed is frequently referred to as southpaw. The term is also
used to refer to a stance in which the boxer places the right foot
in front of the left, so it is possible for a right-handed boxer to
box with a southpaw stance. Most boxers, southpaw or otherwise,
tend to train with sparring partners who adopt an orthodox stance
which gives southpaws an advantage.
Some left-handed persons may find the term
offensive, especially if the term is not used in the context of a
players preffered hand in sports. This is partially due to the
modern obscurity of the term outside of the Southern United States,
where it is used more frequently than other areas, thus causing a
perception of slander by those unfamiliar with the term.
Accessibility of implements and skills
Left-handed people are sometimes placed at a
disadvantage by the prevalence of right handed tools in society.
Many tools and devices are designed to be comfortably used with the
right hand. For example, (right-handed) scissors, a very common
tool, are arranged so that the line being cut along can be seen by
a right-handed user, but is obscured to a left-handed user.
Furthermore, the handles are often molded in a way that is
difficult for a left-hander to hold, and extensive use in such
cases can lead to varying levels of discomfort. Most importantly,
the scissoring or shearing action - how the blades work together
(how they are attached at the pivot) - operates correctly for a
right-hander, but a left-hander will tend to force the blades apart
rather than shearing the target substance.
The computer
mouse is sometimes made to fit the right hand better. Many
computer installations have the mouse placed on the right side,
making it awkward for left handers to use without moving the mouse
to the other side of the keyboard. Some mouse drivers and operating
systems allow the user to reconfigure the mouse buttons to
reverse their functions. However, being left-handed does not always
mean the person uses the mouse on a computer with the left hand;
many left-handers can use the mouse right-handed because they
learned it that way from the start. It can be said that this is an
advantage as one can use the mouse with their non-dominant hand,
leaving their left to do tasks such as taking notes
uninterrupted.
While European-style kitchen
knives are symmetrical, Japanese
kitchen knives have the cutting edge ground asymmetrically, with ratios
ranging from 70-30 for the average chef's knife, to 90-10 for
professional sushi chef
knives; left-handed models are rare, and usually must be specially
ordered or custom made.
The lack of left-handed tools and machines in
many workplaces is not only a nuisance to many left-handers, but
has actually placed them at peril. One example is the band saw, whose
standard design is convenient for right-handers but encourages
left-handers to pass their arms dangerously close to the cutting
blade with every pass of the saw. In fact, some factories have
installed left-handed equipment after successful class-action
lawsuits on behalf of left-handed employees.
Many well-intentioned companies have manufactured
products with left-handers in mind, but have still failed to meet
left-handers' needs. For instance, many companies have produced
"left-handed scissors" by simply inverting the scissors' handles,
making the grip work for the left-hander. Unfortunately, for
scissors to function in a truly left-handed manner, their blades
must also be mirror-inverted, without which the left-hander is
forced to make a "blind cut" because the blade obscures the paper
from view.
Mundial and Fiskars are
companies that have produced truly left-handed scissors, inverting
both the blades and the handles.
Left-handed adaptations have even bridged the
world of music; guitars are often made especially for lefties, and
there have even been inverted pianos where the deepest notes
correspond to the rightmost keys instead of the leftmost. Inverted
trumpets are made, too, but at a considerably higher cost. The
prevailing belief is that left-handed trumpeters aren't at a
significant disadvantage; the French Horn, for example, is played
with the left hand, yet most horn players are right-handed.
Left-handed golf clubs were one of the earlier,
and well-accepted, manifestations of a special version of an
implement; the most notable left-handed-playing participant being
Phil
Mickelson (he is naturally right-handed).
Handwriting
It can be difficult for left-handed children to learn to write if the teacher does not take the student's left-handedness into account. In fact, even in the later 20th century, some UK schools were discouraging children from writing with their left hand, often seriously affecting the child's development (Hansard 1998). When properly done, left-handed writing is a mirror image to that of the right-hander, making the teaching process confusing (if right-handed) for the teacher of a left-handed student. The result is that many left-handed children learn to write with their hand curled around the pen so that it can meet the paper at the same angle as the right hander, rather than simply tilt the paper the opposite way. Once this habit is formed, it is difficult to break. This curling of the hand results in the heel of the palm being placed behind the writing, forcing the writer to lift it off the paper and making the grip even more awkward. In addition, constantly lifting and replacing the hand over fresh ink often causes smudging, causing problems for many left-handed students, especially in exam situations. When the left hand is held correctly, it is below the writing, as is typical for right-handers.However, left-handed people who speak Arabic, Persian,
Urdu and
Hebrew or
any other right to left language, do not have the same difficulties
with writing. The right to left nature of these languages prevents
left-handers from running their hand on the ink as happens with
left to right languages. Still, due to these alphabets being
developed for right-handed people, the characters are still often
more easily matched to a right-handed profile.
Firearms
The vast majority of firearms are designed for right-handed shooters, with the operating handle, magazine release, and/or safety mechanisms set up for manipulation by the right hand, and fired cartridge cases ejected to the right. Also, scopes and sights may be mounted in such a way as to require the shooter to place the rifle against his or her right shoulder. A left-handed shooter must either purchase a left-handed firearm (which are manufactured in smaller numbers and are generally more expensive and/or harder to obtain), shoot a right-handed gun left-handed (which presents certain difficulties, such as the controls being improperly located for them or shell cases being ejected towards their body), or learn to shoot right-handed (which may pose additional problems, primarily that of ocular dominance). Fortunately for left-handed people, modern guns feature more ambidextrous or right/left-handed reversible operating parts than their predecessors. Bullpup rifles are particularly problematic for lefties unless they can be reconfigured, since empty shells would be ejected fast and straight into the shooter's face and cheek potentially causing injury. Lever action and pump action firearms present fewer difficulties for lefties than bolt action weapons do.Left-handedness and intelligence
In his book Right-Hand, Left-Hand, Chris McManus
of University
College London, argues that the proportion of left-handers is
rising and left-handed people as a group have historically produced
an above-average quota of high achievers. He says that
left-handers' brains are structured differently in a way that
widens their range of abilities, and the genes that determine
left-handedness also govern development of the language centers of
the brain.
McManus also says that the increase in the 20th
century of people identifying as left-handed could produce a
corresponding intellectual advance and a leap in the number of
mathematical, sporting, or artistic geniuses.
In 2006, researchers at Lafayette
College and Johns
Hopkins University in a study found that left-handed men are 15
percent richer than right-handed men for those who attended
college, and 26 percent richer if they graduated. The wage
difference is still unexplainable and does not appear to apply to
women.
Prevalence with age
In Britain, a
study in the 1970s found that around 11 percent of men and women
aged 15-24 were left-handed, compared to just 3 percent in the
55-64 age category. The study suggests that 'cultural pressures'
for right-hand use were prevalent in the industrial societies in
the 18th and 19th centuries (with the advancement of mass
literacy), and that those pressures were only significantly relaxed
in the 'later decades' of the 20th century. The study also refers
to tests on medieval skeletons that show evidence of hand-usage
similar to today's, which suggests that hand-prejudice was not
always part of UK society.
Right-Hand, Left-Hand author Chris McManus also
suggests a number of factors that may have led to the modern
increase in left-hand usage:
- Left-handers suffered severe prejudice during the 18th and 19th centuries and it was often "beaten out" of people
- In adulthood, left-handers were often shunned by society, resulting in fewer marrying and reproducing
- As prejudice declined in the 20th century, the number of natural left-handers who stayed left-handed increased
- The rising age of motherhood contributed as, statistically, older mothers are more likely to give birth to left-handed children.
Statistics show that older people are less likely
to be left-handed than their younger counterparts — the
percentages of left-handed people sharply drop off with increased
age. In the U.S., 12 percent of 20 year olds are left-handed, while
only 5 percent of 50 year olds and less than 1 percent of people
over 80 are.
A study published in 1991 claimed that these
statistics indicate that left-handed people's lifespans are shorter
than those of their right-handed counterparts by as much as 9
years. The authors suggested that this may be the result of
left-handed people being more likely to die in accidents as a
result of their "affliction", which renders them clumsier and
ill-equipped to survive in a right-handed world. Many subsequent
studies have shown no evidence that left-handed people have reduced
longevity compared to
right-handed people
According to The Left-Hander Syndrome most people
were only forced to write with their right hand and allowed to
continue being left-handed in most other respects indicating that
the decline in older left-handers is not from being forced or
switching in later life.
Dory Previn
wrote a song in which she explains that she was born left-handed
but nuns in her school
"broke her out of it"; later in life, she went back to using her
left hand she said "I went back to using my left, my natural hand,"
and discovered her musical talent, among other things.
Nuns are often associated with training
left-handers to write with their right hand. However, this practice
was common in both religious and non-religious schools. The
training was due to the difficulty left-handers had writing with
liquid ink or fountain
pens. When writing with these pens, the side of the
left-hander's hand would smear the writing as it passed over the
newly-written words. Fountain pens have widely been replaced by the
ballpoint pens, although traditional teaching methods still
stipulate the use of fountain pens.
Left-handedness in sports
There are many left-handers in sports; however, a written rule in polo states that one must not hold a stick in his or her left arm. There are very few left-handed professionals in polo; all are required to use their right hand. Jai-Alai is another sport where left-handed play is forbidden.In field
hockey, right-handed play is effectively required (though not
explicitly so) because one rule states that the ball cannot be
played with the back of the stick and left hand sticks are not
allowed. The reason for this is because when attempting to tackle
the opponent's stick, the left hander would have to go through
his/her legs, while another specifies that the stick be flat on its
left side, which would be the "natural" side for a right-handed
player, but when playing with the stick in one hand (playing
reverse), this can give an advantage back to the left-handers.
Having all players play with the same handedness is essential to
keeping field hockey a non-contact sport: a left-hander and a
right-hander competing for the ball would tend to collide.
Interestingly, in the sport of ice hockey,
there are many more left- shooters. When shooting, the player's
less dominant hand is in the middle of the stick, and the dominant
hand is at the top of the stick. When skating fast, or stretching
to reach a far away puck, a player will often use only the top hand
on the stick. The majority of right-dominant players shoot
left-handed, and likewise, the majority of left-dominant players
shoot right, allowing them to use their dominant hand when wielding
the stick one-handed. The majority of goaltenders also catch with
their left hand. In Canada, left-handed children are encouraged to
play with a right-handed shot, and this puts their dominant hand on
the top of the stick, which strengthens stick-handling skills.
However, in the United States, lefties are encouraged to play
left-handed; this is because of a perceived advantage at shooting
and vision on the ice.
In fencing,
a right-handed fencer might be more accustomed to facing another
right-handed fencer simply because being right-handed is more
common. A left-handed fencer might also be more accustomed to
facing a right-handed opponent for the same reasons. Therefore,
when a right-handed fencer faces a left-handed opponent, the
right-hander is not as used to fighting a left-hander as the
left-hander is used to fighting a right-hander, causing a
noticeable advantage. The same advantage may be present for most
one-on-one or face-to-face sporting events.
Baseball is
particularly suited to left-handed players for several reasons:
left-handed batters are already a step or two closer to first base
in their batter's box before they even hit the ball and are more
likely to beat out close plays, although a left-handed hitter faces
third base and has to pivot before running to first. Many baseball
parks have shorter right field fences which gives left-handed
sluggers a few more home runs that would otherwise be outs. And
finally, most pitchers are right-handed which gives the left-handed
hitter a better angle to see the ball and causes curve and sliding
pitches to move towards them, rather than away (right-handed
batters are similarly advantaged against left-handed pitchers.)
That is why a good switch
hitter is considered valuable. Also, it is generally preferred
(but not required) that first-basemen be left-handed to give them a
better tagging angle on pick-off moves and more so because on most
balls hit in the field of play, their gloved right hand would be on
its forehand as opposed to the backhand. Left-handed fielders
almost never play third base, shortstop, or second base, however,
because the throwing position towards first base is awkward for a
lefty. Catchers are virtually always right-handed as well, because
it is difficult to throw to third base in an attempt to catch a
base-stealer since a southpaw would have to pivot to the left to
get in position for the throw rather than deliver a quick snap with
the right hand. The only career catcher to ever throw with his left
hand was Jack
Clements, who caught for 17 years in the 19th century. A
left-handed pitcher naturally faces toward first base, and thus can
easily keep an eye on a runner trying to steal second. However, a
right-handed pitcher has a more natural body movement in throwing
the ball towards first base, when attempting to pick off the
runner. First-baseman
Charlie
Grimm was known as "baseball's only left-handed banjo player"--rare indeed when
one considers how difficult it is to play most stringed musical
instruments left-handed.
In football
(soccer), left-handed players are often more skilled at playing
with the left foot (though being left-handed does not necessarily
result in being left-footed),
which makes them valuable as they can play better on the left side
of the field than right-handed players. A famous example of a
left-handed football player, who also plays with his left foot is
the Argentinian superstar Lionel
Messi.
In tennis, left-handers impart spin
on the ball that is opposite of that which a right hander would
hit. As a result, right-handed players (who are accustomed to
playing right handers) have difficulty dealing with a left-hander's
shots which curve in a direction opposite to what they are
accustomed to facing. Rafael
Nadal, despite being right-handed, plays left-handed tennis
after being encouraged to do so by his coach for this very
reason.
In American
football, the most famous left-handed players are usually
quarterbacks, such as Kenny
Stabler, Michael
Vick, Mark
Brunell,
Steve Young, Boomer
Esiason, Matt
Leinart, and Jim Zorn. Vick
may be an exception though, since he is normally right handed, but
throws with his left, despite there being many right handed
quarterbacks who have had much NFL success.Donovan
McNabb is normally left-handed, but throws with his
right.
In basketball, left handed
players have a distinct advantage on both ends of the court. On
defense, it easier to play against a right-handed player since the
defender typically angles the left side of his body towards the
dribbler to both force him to dribble with his left hand, and to
raise his own left hand in the event of a jumpshot. Conversely if
that offensive player is left handed, the standard defensive stance
would favor them as they are not being forced to use their weaker
hand. In fact, dribbling with the left hand is a highly valued
skill in basketball for this very reason. When shooting, since the
defender will typically raise his left hand to attempt the block
the shot (since his left hand will be closer to the shooter's
right-handed shot) a left-handed shooter will have more room to see
the basket and attempt the shot.
In water polo,
being left-handed allows a player to have an easier time shooting
from the right side of the field, as having their shooting hand
towards the middle of the field allows them to whip the ball around
the keeper and into the upper left corner, a shot which a
right-hander in the same position would find impossible. Also, when
driving into the center from the right side, a left-handed player
can take a dry pass and immediately shoot, whereas a right-handed
player would require a wet pass and have to try and chip the goalie
on a pop shot. This is why many teams like to have left-handed
players, and why they tend to only play on the right (right-handed
players have all similar advantages on the left side of the
pool).
Boxing appears to be
something of an exception to the rule that being a southpaw confers
an advantage. Until Karl
Mildenberger fought Muhammad Ali
in 1966, there had not been a southpaw challenger for the
heavyweight title since James J.
Corbett, aka "Gentleman Jim" in 1892, and there have only been
three southpaw heavyweight title holders since then: Michael
Moorer, Corrie
Sanders, and the current WBA
heavyweight champion Ruslan
Chagaev. However, it is worth distinguishing between the
southpaw stance and being left-handed, because some trainers will
train a naturally left-handed boxer to fight in an orthodox stance,
not merely for convenience but because there may be an advantage in
having the jab delivered
with the stronger hand. Hence a number of boxers who fought in an
orthodox stance may have been converted left-handers.
In cricket, left-handed players
have thrived over the years. Many technically sound batsmen have
been left-handed. As of mid 2006, each and every of the Test
playing nations have at least one left-handed batsman in their
side. One of the reasons for this is that having a mix of right and
left-handers tends to disrupt the bowler's accuracy, because when
both a right-handed batsman and a left-handed batsman are batting,
the bowler must adjust the line he is bowling when the batsmen
change ends. Some famous left-handed cricketers include yesteryear
greats like Graeme
Pollock, Allan
Border, David Gower,
Gary
Sobers and Wasim Akram;
and contemporary greats Brian Lara,
Saeed
Anwar, Sourav
Ganguly, Sanath
Jayasuriya, Adam
Gilchrist, Graeme
Smith, Mike Hussey
and Matthew
Hayden. It is also well-known that Sachin
Tendulkar and Darren Gough
both write left-handed. However, many of these players are actually
right-handed but bat left-handed.
In ten-pin
bowling, left-handed bowlers often need to buy bowling shoes
with a sliding sole on the right shoe (the right foot is the one
used for release), unless both right and left shoes have sliding
soles. There is a stereotype that left-handers start from the
outside of the lane and do a stroker
style release. Left-handers also have a vast advantage during
league and tournament play in ten-pin bowling. As many games are
bowled on the same lanes, the oil is dried up and smeared around.
This happens less on the left side of the lane as there are,
typically, less bowlers bowling left-handed. Left-handed bowlers
include Rafael
Nepomuceno, Earl
Anthony, Parker Bohn
III, Jason Couch
and Patrick
Allen.
In Ultimate,
being left-handed can throw off a defender who is more accustomed
to defending a right-hander. This is more noticeable at the amateur
level. The usual right-sided guard blocks a right-handed player's
backhand, which can nullify beginners who have yet to develop a
forehand or hammer throw. A lefty, however, can easily throw around
a right-sided guard, as their backhand is wide open. Furthermore, a
left-hander can be more readily able to throw around their marker's
body (also known as 'breaking the mark') on the forehand side due
to being able to throw from a more off-balanced position and the
defense not setting a mark symmetrically on each side of the body.
This has the result of opening up the pitch for their
receivers.
Minor sports where left-handedness is a
significant advantage include Eton Fives,
where the buttress is on the left, the ideal serve placing the ball
at the bottom corner - almost impossible for a right-handed player
to reach. Another is Real (Royal)
Tennis, in which the serve along the penthouse is far easier
with the left hand than with the right.
Left-handedness in music
In music, guitar great Jimi Hendrix played a right-handed Fender Stratocaster strung upside down to accommodate his left-handedness. Upon meeting Robert Fripp, leader of King Crimson (of whose music Hendrix had become an avid fan), Hendrix asked him to shake his left hand. Although left-handed, Fripp plays guitar right-handed. Paul McCartney of The Beatles is left-handed; when he first played for John Lennon, he played Lennon's right-handed guitar upside-down. Mark Knopfler and David Knopfler are left handers who play regular right-handed guitars. Billy Ray Cyrus and Dan Seals are notable county music singers who play guitar left-handed. Freddie Mercury, pianist, song writer and lead singer of Queen was left-handed. In India where Freddie was educated during his early childhood, parents and educators discouraged the use of the left hand, so Mercury learned to write and perform other tasks equally well with his right hand. Nirvana front man Kurt Cobain was a well known left handed guitarist. Albert King and BB King are also left handed; however the latter plays right sided guitars while the former usually played a Flying V strung for a right hander but with a left handed stance (upside down). Niccolò Paganini, violinist and composer, was left-handed. The classical pianist Glenn Gould was left-handed. Ringo Starr of The Beatles is also left-handed, even though he plays a right-handed drum set, which gives him a distinct style of drumming. Oasis songwriter and vocalist Noel Gallagher is left handed. Despite this, Gallagher plays the guitar right handed as he says this is the 'only thing' his right hand is good at. Zacky Vengeance of Avenged Sevenfold, Dick Dale, Colie Brice, Doyle Brahmhall III plays guitar left-handed.Left-sidedness
Studies show that left-handedness does not necessarily correspond with "left-sidedness" (such as using your left foot to kick with), though most left-handed people tend to have "left-sidedness". The same effect holds with ocular dominance. It has also been found that people have dominant sides of the body, such as the eye, foot, and ear.Possible effects in humans on thinking
There are many theories on how being left-handed affects the way a person thinks. One theory divides left- and right-handed thinkers into two camps: visual simultaneous vs. linear sequential.According to this theory, right-handed people are
thought to process information using a "linear sequential" method
in which one thread must complete its processing before the next
thread can be started.
Left-handed persons are thought to process
information using a "visual simultaneous" method in which several
threads can be processed simultaneously. Another way to view this
is such: Suppose there were one thousand pieces of popcorn and one
of them was colored blue. Right-handed people—using the linear
sequential processing style—would look at the popcorn one at a time
until they encountered the blue one. The left-handed person would
spread out the pieces of popcorn and look at all of them to find
the one that was blue. A side effect of these differing styles of
processing is that right-handers need to complete one task before
they can start the next. Left-handers, by contrast, are capable and
comfortable switching between tasks. This seems to suggest that
left-handed people have an excellent ability to multi-task, and
anecdotal evidence suggests that there are more creative stems due
to this ability to multi-task.
Right-handed people process information using
"analysis", which is the method of solving a problem by breaking it
down to its pieces and analyzing the pieces one at a time. By
contrast, left-handed people process information using "synthesis",
which is the method of solving a problem by looking at the whole
and trying to use pattern-matching to solve the problem.,
researchers Allen D. Bragdon and David Gamon, Ph.D., briefly
described some of the current research on handedness and its
significance. "Handedness researchers Coren and Clare Porac have
shown that left-handed university students are more likely to major
in visually-based, as opposed to language-based subjects. Another
sample of 103 art students found an astounding 47 percent were
left- or mixed-handed." [page 76]
Ultimately, being left-handed is not an
all-or-nothing situation. The processing styles operate on a
continuum where some people are more visual-simultaneous and others
are more linear-sequential.
See also
References
External links
- - A fun and informative site contaning useful facts, instructions, news, scholarship info and products for left handers.
- Lefties Have The Advantage In Adversarial Situations, ScienceDaily, April 14, 2006.
- Science Creative Quarterly's overview of some of the genetic underpinnings of left-handedness
- Quirks & Quarks June 10, 2006 (CBC radio documentary on left-handedness including interviews with four scientists holding different views on the determinants of handedness)
- A left-handed senior citizen recalls the emotional torment he faced at a New York public school in the 1920s. (Audio slideshow)
- Famous Left-Handers
- Schwartz, Alyssa (2005). "Lefties face increased breast cancer risk," C-Health News, 30 September.
- href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/1699905.stm">http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/1699905.stm Scans may 'cause brain changes', BBC News.
- Hansard (1998) ‘Left-handed Children’, Debate contribution by the Rt Hon. Mr. Peter Luff (MP for Mid-Worcestershire), House of Commons, 22 July.
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