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Meta-Analysis Finds No Creative Edge for Left-Handers

  • A team of academics from institutions in the United States and Hong Kong reviewed close to 1,000 studies dating back to 1900 to investigate the connection between which hand people prefer to use and their creative abilities.
  • This study challenged the widespread belief that people who are left-handed possess greater creativity, a notion partly influenced by their noticeable presence in certain artistic professions.
  • The researchers analyzed information on occupations from close to 12,000 individuals spanning over 770 job categories and observed that left-handed people were more common in music and art professions, but this trend did not extend to other creative careers such as architecture or physics.
  • Psychologist Daniel Casasanto clarified that scientific evidence does not indicate that left-handed individuals possess greater creative abilities. He attributed the persistence of this misconception to selective referencing of limited studies and the belief in "left-handed exceptionalism," which incorrectly links the rarity of left-handedness with exceptional creativity.
  • The findings challenge the stereotype by showing left-handedness does not confer greater creativity, highlighting that creativity depends on multiple factors beyond hand dominance.
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Neuroscience News broke the news in on Monday, June 30, 2025.
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