MORE LEFT HANDED MEN ARE BORN DURING THE WINTER
Men born in November,
December or January are more likely of being left-handed than during the rest
of the year. While the genetic bases of handedness are still under debate,
scientists at the Faculty of Psychology, University of Vienna, obtained
indirect evidence of a hormonal mechanism promoting left-handedness among men.
Psychologist Ulrich
Tran and his colleagues published their findings in the scientific journal Cortex.
Various manual tasks
in everyday life require the use of the right hand or are optimized for
right-handers. Around 90 percent of the general population is right-handed,
only about 10 percent is left-handed. The study of Ulrich Tran, Stefan Stieger,
and Martin Voracek comprised two large and independent samples of nearly 13,000
adults from Austria and Germany. As in modern genetic studies, where a discovery-and-replication-sample
design is standard, the use of two samples allowed testing the replicability
and robustness of findings within one-and-the-same study.
Overall, 7.5 percent
of women and 8.8 percent of men were left-handed. "We were surprised to
see that this imbalance was caused by more left-handed men being born
specifically during November, December, and January. On a monthly average, 8.2
percent of left-handed men were born during the period February to October.
During November to January, this number rose to 10.5 percent," according
to Ulrich Tran, lead author of the study.
A hormonal cause
during embryonic development
"Presumably,
the relative darkness during the period November to January is not directly
connected to this birth seasonality of handedness. We assume that the relative
brightness during the period May to July, half a year before, is its distal
cause," explains Ulrich Tran. A theory, brought forth in the 1980s by US
neurologists Norman Geschwind and Albert Galaburda, posits that testosterone
delays the maturation of the left brain hemisphere during embryonic
development. The left brain hemisphere is dominant among right-handers, the
right brain hemisphere is dominant among left-handers. Intrauterine
testosterone levels are higher in the male fetus, because of its own
testosterone secretion, than in the female fetus. However, the testosterone
level of the mother and external factors may also affect intrauterine
testosterone levels. Specifically, more daylight may increase testosterone levels,
making a seasonality effect plausible.
Previous studies on
the subject provided mixed and inconsistent evidence. There was no clear
indication which season has an effect, and whether seasonality affects men,
women or both sexes equally. According to the current findings, there is a
small, but robust and replicable, effect of birth seasonality on handedness,
affecting only men. These results are consistent with a hormonal basis of
handedness, corroborating thus an old and controversial theory. However, the
exact way of causation needs to be investigated in future studies.
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