The percentage of left-handedness (8.3%) in neonates coincided with adult left-handedness (6.3-9.2%). The percentage of consistent right-hand preference in adults coincided with percentage of right-handedness in neonates (25.7%). http://cogprints.org/135/
Only about 10% of the population is left handed ... http://www.holidayinsights.com/other/lefthand.htm
... while in humans that percentage hovers around 10.
[discover.com/jan_02/featbiology.html] link no longer works
Response last updated by CmdrK on May 25 2021.
Oct 16 2002, 5:21 AM
Ladymacb29
Answer has 4 votes
Ladymacb29
Answer has 4 votes.
From what I understand, left-handedness is a recessive trait, meaning that there should be no more than 25% of the population with it at any time. Say the gene for being right-handed is H and the gene for left-handed is h, the only combinations you can have are HH, Hh (twice), and hh. Only one quarter of the time is left-handedness expected.
Now, add into factors that in many places, it's taboo to favour the left hand (considered dirty, immoral, etc.) and in many places lefties are forced to switch their preference to the right hand. So if that happens to half of the lefties, the percentage of lefties in the world is actually 12.5% - exactly as someone else pointed out.
Response last updated by gtho4 on Aug 23 2016.
Oct 17 2002, 3:32 AM
little lady
Answer has 4 votes
little lady
Answer has 4 votes.
Left-handedness is a recessive trait. Right-handed people can be homozygous, (RR) or heterozygous, (Rr) to be left handed you must be homozygous, (rr). To work out what chances your child would have hypothetically of being left-handed, you can work it out on a punnett square. eg., if both parents were homozygous right-handed, the offspring would be 100% right handed. If there was one homozygous right-handed parent and one heterozygous parent, the offspring would be also 100% right handed, but may be either hetero or homozygous right-handed. If both parents were heterozygous the child would have 25% chance of being left-handed (homozygous-rr), 50% heterozygous right-handed and 25% chance of being homozygous right-handed. And finally, if both parents were left-handed, the child would have 100% chance of being left-handed. Hope that clears things up.