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There are some articles on the web that recommend learning to write with your non-dominant hand to get in touch with your inner child or a higher power, increase your creativity and be more open-minded or some such thing. I don't usually believe random stuff from the internet, but:

One of my drawing teachers told us to try drawing with the non-dominant hand. What I discovered was that I was very much better at getting proportions right with the non-dominant hand. I only had to use the dominant hand to clean up the shaky lines, because my non-dominant hand has poor fine motor control.

So there is obviously something that happens, when I use the "other" hand, something that has to do with how my perceptions are processed and my hand movement is controlled. But these "switches" while I draw are just temporary. What is sometimes recommended on some websites is a more fundamental change: to switch hands for all tasks.

Is there research on the effects of switching hands for all or certain tasks?

I have no idea which tags I should select. Please edit my tags, if you feel you know better.

Jeromy Anglim
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Yes, there are benefits, but I don't think it requires long-term switches. Studies have used this as a manipulation to try and increase self control and have found that it decrease aggression. Based on this, once one has mastered using the non-dominant hand, it seems like the benefit of continuing to use that hand might be over (as it no longer requires effort).

See: Denson, T. F., Capper, M. M., Oaten, M., Friese, M., & Schofield, T. P. (2011). Self-control training decreases aggression in response to provocation in aggressive individuals. Journal of Research in Personality, 45(2), 252–256. doi:10.1016/j.jrp.2011.02.001

user1589483
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    "Our findings provide evidence for persisting differences in the functional neuroanatomy of handwriting between right-handers and converted left-handers, despite decades of right-hand writing." http://www.jneurosci.org/content/22/7/2816.long The brains of converted left-handers are more active than non-converted right- or left-handers, and they are active in a "left-hand way": "brain regions involved in planning movement stubbornly refuse to switch, and continue to act like those of left-handers in people who have switched to right-handedness". http://www.jneurosci.org/content/27/29/7847.full –  Sep 06 '13 at 18:29
  • +1 for the the new info -- didn't know this was used as a manipulation. Very interesting. But it seems like some differences persist, though it apparently remains unclear what effects these differences have. –  Sep 06 '13 at 18:32
  • https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3820189/Could-forcing-write-hands-make-smarter-Experts-remain-divided-bizarre-brain-training-technique.html – praveen kr Mar 19 '19 at 14:56