1. Teszner D, Tzavaras A, Gruner J, Hécaen H. Right-left asymmetry of the planum temporale; apropos of the anatomical study of 100 brains. Rev Neurol (Paris) 1972;126:444-449. PMID:
4677428.
2. Rubens AB, Mahowald MW, Hutton JT. Asymmetry of lateral (Sylvian) fissures in man. Neurology 1976;26:620-624. PMID:
945509.
3. Galaburda AM, Corsiglia J, Rosen GD, Sherman GF. Planum temporale asymmetry: reappraisal since Geschwind and Levitsky. Neuropsychologia 1987;25:853-868.
4. Eidelberg D, Galaburda AM. Inferior parietal lobule. Divergent architectonic asymmetries in the human brain. Arch Neurol 1984;41:843-852. PMID:
6466160.
5. Galaburda AM. Asymmetries of cerebral neuroanatomy. Ciba Found Symp 1991;162:219-226. discussion 226-233. PMID:
1802644.
6. Benca RM, Obermeyer WH, Larson CL, Yun B, Dolski I, Kleist K, et al. EEG alpha power and alpha power asymmetry in sleep and wakefulness. Psychophysiology 1999;36:430-436. PMID:
10432792.
7. Swanson N, Eichele T, Pearlson G, Kiehl K, Yu Q, Calhoun VD. Lateral differences in the default mode network in healthy controls and schizophrenia patients. Hum Brain Mapp 2011;32:654-664. PMID:
21391254.
8. Bolduc C, Daoust AM, Limoges E, Braun CMJ, Godbout R. Hemispheric lateralization of the EEG during wakefulness and REM sleep in young healthy adults. Brain Cogn 2003;53:193-196. PMID:
14607146.
9. Hagemann D, Hewig J, Seifert J, Naumann E, Bartussek D. The latent state-trait structure of resting EEG asymmetry: replication and extension. Psychophysiology 2005;42:740-752. PMID:
16364070.
10. Jackson DC, Mueller CJ, Dolski I, Dalton KM, Nitschke JB, Urry HL, et al. Now you feel it, now you don’t: frontal brain electrical asymmetry and individual differences in emotion regulation. Psychol Sci 2003;14:612-617. PMID:
14629694.
11. Papousek I, Reiser EM, Weber B, Freudenthaler HH, Schulter G. Frontal brain asymmetry and affective flexibility in an emotional contagion paradigm. Psychophysiology 2012;49:489-498. PMID:
22176666.
12. Lewis RS, Weekes NY, Wang TH. The effect of a naturalistic stressor on frontal EEG asymmetry, stress, and health. Biol Psychol 2007;75:239-247. PMID:
17512106.
13. Kalin NH, Larson C, Shelton SE, Davidson RJ. Asymmetric frontal brain activity, cortisol, and behavior associated with fearful temperament in rhesus monkeys. Behav Neurosci 1998;112:286-292. PMID:
9588478.
14. Tops M, Wijers AA, van Staveren ASJ, Bruin KJ, Den Boer JA, Meijman TF, et al. Acute cortisol administration modulates EEG alpha asymme-try in volunteers: relevance to depression. Biol Psychol 2005;69:181-193. PMID:
15804545.
15. Tops M, van Peer JM, Wester AE, Wijers AA, Korf J. State-dependent regulation of cortical activity by cortisol: an EEG study. Neurosci Lett 2006;404:39-43. PMID:
16822613.
16. Cajochen C, Biase RD, Imai M. Interhemispheric EEG asymmetries during unilateral bright-light exposure and subsequent sleep in humans. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 2008;294:R1053-R1060. PMID:
18216135.
17. Casagrande M, Bertini M. Night-time right hemisphere superiority and daytime left hemisphere superiority: a repatterning of laterality across wake-sleep-wake states. Biol Psychol 2008;77:337-342. PMID:
18162282.
18. Laeng B, Shah J, Kosslyn S. Identifying objects in conventional and contorted poses: contributions of hemisphere-specific mechanisms. Cognition 1999;70:53-85. PMID:
10193056.
19. Schmidt P, Krings T, Willmes K, Roessler F, Reul J, Thron A. Determination of cognitive hemispheric lateralization by “functional” transcranian Doppler cross-validated by functional MRI. Stroke 1999;30:939-945. PMID:
10229724.
20. Burbaud P, Camus O, Guehl D, Bioulac B, Caille J, Allard M. Influence of cognitive strategies on the pattern of cortical activation during mental subtraction. A functional imaging study in human subjects. Neurosci Lett 2000;287:76-80. PMID:
10841995.
21. Beck AT, Epstein N, Brown G, Steer RA. An inventory for measuring clinical anxiety: psychometric properties. J Consult Clin Psychol 1988;56:893-897. PMID:
3204199.
22. Beck AT, Ward CH, Mendelson M, Mock J, Erbaugh J. An inventory for measuring depression. Arch Gen Psychiatry 1961;4:561-471. PMID:
13688369.
23. Raymond M, Pontier D. Is there geographical variation in human handedness? Laterality 2004;9:35-51. PMID:
15382729.
24. Knecht S, Dräger B, Deppe M, Bobe L, Lohmann H, Flöel A, et al. Handedness and hemispheric language dominance in healthy humans. Brain 2000;123:2512-2518. PMID:
11099452.
25. Hopkins WD. Comparing human and nonhuman primate handedness: challenges and a modest proposal for concensus. Dev Psychobiol 2013;55:621-636. PMID:
23913784.
26. Hamilton CR, Vermeire BA. Complementary hemispheric specialization in monkeys. Science 1988;242:1691-1694. PMID:
3201258.
27. Pohl P. Central auditory processing: V. Ear advantage for acoustic stimuli in baboons. Brain Lang 1983;20:44-53. PMID:
6626944.
28. De Lacoste-Utamsing C, Holloway RL. Sexual dismorphism in the human corpus callosum. Science 1982;216:1431-1432. PMID:
7089533.
29. Driesen NR, Raz N. The influence of sex, age and handedness on corpus callosum morphology: a metal-analysis. Psychobiology 1995;23:240-247.
30. Holloway RL, de Lacoste MC. Sexual dimorphism in the human corpus callosum: an extension and replication study. Hum Neurobiol 1986;5:87-91. PMID:
3733478.
31. Hopkins WD, Misiura M, Pope SM, Latash EM. Behavioral and brain asymmetries in primates: a preliminary evaluation of two evolutionary hypotheses. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2015;1359:65-83. PMID:
26426409.
32. Goldman RI, Stern JM, Engel J Jr, Cohen MS. Simultaneous EEG and fMRI of the alpha rhythm. Neuroreport 2002;13:2487-2492. PMID:
12499854.
33. Treder MS, Bahramisharif A, Schmidt NM, van Gerven MA, Blankertz B. Brain-computer interfacing using modulations of alpha activity induced bycovert shifts of attention. J Neuroeng Rehabil 2011;8:24PMID:
21672270.
34. Sterman MB, Egner T. Foundation and practice of neurofeedback for thetreatment of epilepsy. Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback 2006;31:21-35. PMID:
16614940.
35. Wright KP, Badia P, Wauquier A. Topographical and temporal patterns of brain activity during the transition from wakefulness to sleep. Sleep 1995;18:880-889. PMID:
8746396.
36. Tanaka H, Hayashi M, Hori T. Topographical characteristics and principal component structure of the hypnagogic EGG. Sleep 1997;20:523-534. PMID:
9322268.
37. Park DH, Ha JH, Ryu SH, Yu JH, Shin CJ. Three-dimensional electroencephalographic changes on Low-Resolution Brain Electromagnetic Tomography (LORETA) during the sleep onset period. Clin EEG Neurosci 2015;46:340-346. PMID:
25150221.
38. Merica H, Gaillard JM. The EEG of the sleep onset period in insomnia: a discriminant analysis. Physiol Behav 1992;52:199-204. PMID:
1523243.
39. Boldyreva GN, Zhavoronkova LA. Interhemispheric asymmetry of EEG coherence as a reflection of different functional states of the human brain. Biomed Sci 1991;2:266-270. PMID:
1751759.
40. Zhavoronkova LA, Trofimova EV. Coherence dynamics of EEG and motor reactions while falling asleep in right-handed and left handed people I. Analysis of interhemispheric correlations. Fiziol Cheloveka 1997;23:18-26. PMID:
9494263.
41. Zhavoronkova LA, Trofimova EV. Dynamics of EEG coherence in right-handers and left-handers when falling asleep: II. An analysis of interhemispheric relations. Hum Neurobiol 1998;24:32-39.
42. Violani C, Testa P, Casagrande M. Actigraphic motor asymmetries during sleep. Sleep 1998;21:472-476. PMID:
9703586.
43. Jalili M. Hemispheric asymmetry of electroencephalography-based functional brain networks. Neuroreport 2014;25:1266-1271. PMID:
25191924.