PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS
⁃ Forrester G. S. , Davis R, Todd, (data collection complete, analysis in progress) Hand Dominance and Holding Behaviour: A Comparison of Motor Biases and Cognition in Children with and without Neurodevelopmental Disorders. Target Journal: Scientific Reports
⁃ Forrester GS, Gliga T, Johnson MH, The BASIS Team (under submission) Lateralised gaze behaviour predicts cognitive outcomes in children with and without autism. Target Journal: Biological Letters
⁃ Gianluca M, Marzoli M Apicella F, Abiuso C, Muratori F, Forrester GS, Vallortigara G, Scattoni ML, Tommasi L (submitted: Scientific Reports) Received cradling bias during the first year of life: A retrospective study on children with typical and atypical development
⁃ Forrester GS, and Hudry, K. and Lindell, A. and Hopkins, W.D., eds. (2018) Cerebral lateralization and cognition: evolutionary and developmental investigations of behavioral biases. Progress In Brain Research 238. Elsevier. ISBN 9780128146712.
⁃ Forrester GS, Davis R, Mareschal D, Malastrata G, Todd B (2018) The Left Cradling Bias: An Evolutionary Facilitator of Social Cognition?, Cortex (Special Issue: The Evolution of the Mind and the Brain (eds, Zilles & Thiebaut de Schotten) online first: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2018.05.011
⁃ Forrester GS, Todd B (2018) A comparative perspective on lateral biases and social behavior. Progress in Brain Research, 238: 377-403, online first:
⁃ Forrester, G.S. (2017) Hand, limb and other motor preferences: Methodological Considerations (eds. Vallortigara, G., Rogers, L) In: Lateralized Brain Functions (Series on Neuromethods, series editor, Walz, W), Springer Books.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Rawlings, B., Davila-Ross, M. (2016). Free-ranging wild chimpanzees show a right hand bias for a feeding sequence. American Journal of Physical Anthropology.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Thomas, M.S.C. (2015). What is universal and what differs in language development? Response Article, Language, Cognition & Neuroscience.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Rodriguez, A. (2015). Slip of the tongue: Implications for evolution and language development. Cognition 141:103-111.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Crawley, M., Palmer, C. (2014). Social environment elicits lateralized navigational behavior in two populations of typically developing children. Brain and Cognition 91:21-27.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Pegler, R., Thomas, M.A., Mareschal, D. (2014). Handedness as a marker of cerebral lateralization in children with and without autism. Behavioural Brain Research 268:14-21.
⁃ Quaresmini, C., Forrester, G.S., Spiezio, C., Vallortigara, G. (2014). Social environment elicits lateralized behaviors in gorillas and chimpanzees. Journal of Comparative Psychology 128(3): 276-284.
⁃ Tabiowo, E., Forrester, G.S. (2013). Structured bimanual actions and hand transfers reveal population-level right-handedness in captive gorillas. Animal Behaviour. 86(5):1049-1057.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Quaresmini, C., Leavens, D.A, Mareschal, D.,Thomas, M.A. (2013) Human handedness: An inherited evolutionary trait. Behavioural Brain Research. 237:200-206.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Quaresmini, C (2013). In: Behavioural Lateralization in Vertebrates – Two Sides of a Same Coin (eds. Regolin, L and Csermely, D). The Right Hand Man: Manual Laterality and Language. Pp. 125-141. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Quaresmini, C., Leavens, D.S., Spiezio, C., Vallortigara, G. (2012). Target animacy influences chimpanzee handedness. Animal Cognition. 15(6):1121-7.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Leavens, D.A., Quaresmini, C., Vallortigara, G. (2011) Target animacy influences gorilla handedness. Animal Cognition. 14(6) 903-907.
⁃ Quaresmini, C., Forrester, G.S., Spiezio, C., Leavens, D.A., Vallortigara, G. (2011) Gorillas and chimpanzees vary handedness based on the animacy of target objects: A theory for hemispheric specialization based on an evolutionary distinction of object animacy. Folia Primatologica 82(4-5): 264.
⁃ Forrester, G.S. (2008) A multidimensional approach to investigations of behaviour: Revealing structure in animal communication signals. Animal Behaviour, 76: 1749-1760.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., (2008) A multidimensional approach to investigations of primate communication. Folia Primatologica 79(5):329-330.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Forrester, N.A. (2005). Methodology for Detecting Multimodal Communication in Western Lowland Gorillas. American Journal of Primatology: 66(1):167.
⁃ Nobre, A.C., Sebestyen, G., Gitelman, D.R., Mesulam, M.M. (2002). Filtering of distractors during visual search studied by positron emission tomography. Neuroimage 16: 968-976.
⁃ Nobre, A.C., Sebestyen G., Miniussi, C. (2000). The dynamics of shifting visuospatial attention revealed by event-related potentials. Neuropsychologia 38:964-974.
⁃ Nobre, A.C., Sebestyen, G., Gitelman, D.R., Mesulam, M.M., Frackowiak, R.S.J., Frith, C.D. (1997). Functional localisation of the neural network for visual spatial attention by positron-emission tomography. Brain 120:515-533.
⁃ Nobre, A.C., Mesulam, M.M., Sebestyen, G., Frackowiak, R.S.J., Frith, C.D. (1996). Functional localisation of the neural network for visual spatial attention by positron-emission tomography. Neuroimage 3(3):S192.
⁃ Pineda, J.A., Sebestyen, G., Nava, C. (1994). Face recognition as a function of social attention in non-human primates: an ERP study. Cognitive Brain Research, 2: 1-12.
⁃ Forrester GS, Gliga T, Johnson MH, The BASIS Team (under submission) Lateralised gaze behaviour predicts cognitive outcomes in children with and without autism. Target Journal: Biological Letters
⁃ Gianluca M, Marzoli M Apicella F, Abiuso C, Muratori F, Forrester GS, Vallortigara G, Scattoni ML, Tommasi L (submitted: Scientific Reports) Received cradling bias during the first year of life: A retrospective study on children with typical and atypical development
⁃ Forrester GS, and Hudry, K. and Lindell, A. and Hopkins, W.D., eds. (2018) Cerebral lateralization and cognition: evolutionary and developmental investigations of behavioral biases. Progress In Brain Research 238. Elsevier. ISBN 9780128146712.
⁃ Forrester GS, Davis R, Mareschal D, Malastrata G, Todd B (2018) The Left Cradling Bias: An Evolutionary Facilitator of Social Cognition?, Cortex (Special Issue: The Evolution of the Mind and the Brain (eds, Zilles & Thiebaut de Schotten) online first: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2018.05.011
⁃ Forrester GS, Todd B (2018) A comparative perspective on lateral biases and social behavior. Progress in Brain Research, 238: 377-403, online first:
⁃ Forrester, G.S. (2017) Hand, limb and other motor preferences: Methodological Considerations (eds. Vallortigara, G., Rogers, L) In: Lateralized Brain Functions (Series on Neuromethods, series editor, Walz, W), Springer Books.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Rawlings, B., Davila-Ross, M. (2016). Free-ranging wild chimpanzees show a right hand bias for a feeding sequence. American Journal of Physical Anthropology.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Thomas, M.S.C. (2015). What is universal and what differs in language development? Response Article, Language, Cognition & Neuroscience.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Rodriguez, A. (2015). Slip of the tongue: Implications for evolution and language development. Cognition 141:103-111.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Crawley, M., Palmer, C. (2014). Social environment elicits lateralized navigational behavior in two populations of typically developing children. Brain and Cognition 91:21-27.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Pegler, R., Thomas, M.A., Mareschal, D. (2014). Handedness as a marker of cerebral lateralization in children with and without autism. Behavioural Brain Research 268:14-21.
⁃ Quaresmini, C., Forrester, G.S., Spiezio, C., Vallortigara, G. (2014). Social environment elicits lateralized behaviors in gorillas and chimpanzees. Journal of Comparative Psychology 128(3): 276-284.
⁃ Tabiowo, E., Forrester, G.S. (2013). Structured bimanual actions and hand transfers reveal population-level right-handedness in captive gorillas. Animal Behaviour. 86(5):1049-1057.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Quaresmini, C., Leavens, D.A, Mareschal, D.,Thomas, M.A. (2013) Human handedness: An inherited evolutionary trait. Behavioural Brain Research. 237:200-206.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Quaresmini, C (2013). In: Behavioural Lateralization in Vertebrates – Two Sides of a Same Coin (eds. Regolin, L and Csermely, D). The Right Hand Man: Manual Laterality and Language. Pp. 125-141. Springer Berlin Heidelberg.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Quaresmini, C., Leavens, D.S., Spiezio, C., Vallortigara, G. (2012). Target animacy influences chimpanzee handedness. Animal Cognition. 15(6):1121-7.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Leavens, D.A., Quaresmini, C., Vallortigara, G. (2011) Target animacy influences gorilla handedness. Animal Cognition. 14(6) 903-907.
⁃ Quaresmini, C., Forrester, G.S., Spiezio, C., Leavens, D.A., Vallortigara, G. (2011) Gorillas and chimpanzees vary handedness based on the animacy of target objects: A theory for hemispheric specialization based on an evolutionary distinction of object animacy. Folia Primatologica 82(4-5): 264.
⁃ Forrester, G.S. (2008) A multidimensional approach to investigations of behaviour: Revealing structure in animal communication signals. Animal Behaviour, 76: 1749-1760.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., (2008) A multidimensional approach to investigations of primate communication. Folia Primatologica 79(5):329-330.
⁃ Forrester, G.S., Forrester, N.A. (2005). Methodology for Detecting Multimodal Communication in Western Lowland Gorillas. American Journal of Primatology: 66(1):167.
⁃ Nobre, A.C., Sebestyen, G., Gitelman, D.R., Mesulam, M.M. (2002). Filtering of distractors during visual search studied by positron emission tomography. Neuroimage 16: 968-976.
⁃ Nobre, A.C., Sebestyen G., Miniussi, C. (2000). The dynamics of shifting visuospatial attention revealed by event-related potentials. Neuropsychologia 38:964-974.
⁃ Nobre, A.C., Sebestyen, G., Gitelman, D.R., Mesulam, M.M., Frackowiak, R.S.J., Frith, C.D. (1997). Functional localisation of the neural network for visual spatial attention by positron-emission tomography. Brain 120:515-533.
⁃ Nobre, A.C., Mesulam, M.M., Sebestyen, G., Frackowiak, R.S.J., Frith, C.D. (1996). Functional localisation of the neural network for visual spatial attention by positron-emission tomography. Neuroimage 3(3):S192.
⁃ Pineda, J.A., Sebestyen, G., Nava, C. (1994). Face recognition as a function of social attention in non-human primates: an ERP study. Cognitive Brain Research, 2: 1-12.