Lauren Julius Harris

Affiliations: 
Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 
Area:
early childhood CNS development, lateralization, hemispheric asymmetries, History of Neuroscience & Psychology
Google:
"Lauren Harris"
Mean distance: 16.7 (cluster 15)
 
Cross-listing: PsychTree - History of History Tree

BETA: Related publications

Publications

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Harris LJ. (2019) The Discovery of Cerebral Specialization. Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience. 44: 1-14
Harris LJ, Cárdenas RA, Stewart ND, et al. (2018) Are only infants held more often on the left? If so, why? Testing the attention-emotion hypothesis with an infant, a vase, and two chimeric tests, one "emotional," one not. Laterality. 1-33
Cárdenas RA, Harris LJ, Adams RB. (2013) Are babies' faces cues to their parents' fitness? Social Cognition. 31: 649-655
Cárdenas RA, Harris LJ, Becker MW. (2013) Sex differences in visual attention toward infant faces Evolution and Human Behavior. 34: 280-287
Harris LJ. (2010) In fencing, what gives left-handers the edge? Views from the present and the distant past. Laterality. 15: 15-55
Harris LJ. (2010) On teaching infants "the right use of their hands": Advice and reassurance from Mary Palmer Tyler's The Maternal Physician (1811). Laterality. 15: 4-14
Harris LJ, Cárdenas RA, Spradlin MP, et al. (2010) Why are infants held on the left? A test of the attention hypothesis with a doll, a book, and a bag. Laterality. 15: 548-71
Harris LJ. (2010) Side biases for holding and carrying infants: Reports from the past and possible lessons for today. Laterality. 15: 56-135
Harris LJ, Cardénas RA, Spradlin MP, et al. (2009) Adults' preferences for side-of-hold as portrayed in paintings of the Madonna and Child. Laterality. 14: 590-617
Harris LJ, Almerigi JB. (2009) Probing the human brain with stimulating electrodes: the story of Roberts Bartholow's (1874) experiment on Mary Rafferty. Brain and Cognition. 70: 92-115
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