Primal Health Databank: Study
Entry No: | 0236 |
Title: | Left handedness, birth order and birth stress |
Author(s): | Tan LE, Nettleton NC |
Reference: | Cortex 1980; 16(3): 363-73 |
Place of Study: | No place of study mentioned for this entry |
Abstract: | The handedness of 942 subjects (305 tertiary students, 591 of their siblings and 46 of their children) was ascertained by a 14-item questionnaire. The mothers of subjects supplied information about maternal age at birth, birth weight, and the presence or absence of twelve conditions likely to be associated with birth stress for each subject. No increase in left handedness was found among fourth or later born children. A significant decrease occurred in first-borns of both sexes, although these had more stressful births than other subjects. No relationship between maternal age, birth weight or reported birth stress and left handedness was found. Thus the hypothesis that birth stress is a major cause of left handedness in normal subjects was not supported. |
Keyword(s): | birth complications, birth order, handedness |
Discussion: | See entries 181,184, 233-235 |
See Also: | 0181, 0184, 0232, 0233, 0234, 0235 |
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