ABSTRACT

Recent studies showed that the choice of one hand to reach for an object is not solely determined by handedness but is also function of the object location in space (Bradshaw et al., 1994; Bryden, Pryde, & Roy, 1999; Gabbard & Rabb, 2000; Doyen & Carlier, 2002). The preferred-hand use decreases as the position of object moves further into the hemispace contralateral to the dominant hand.