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Testing the prenatal androgen hypothesis: measuring digit ratios, sexual orientation, and spatial abilities in adults
Authors:van Anders Sari M  Hampson Elizabeth
Institution:Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada.
Abstract:The present study examined whether the following variables putatively associated with prenatal androgens are inter-related in women: spatial abilities, sexual orientation, and 2nd to 4th finger (digit) length ratio (2D:4D). Participants were 99 healthy premenopausal women tested in the menstrual phase of the ovarian cycle between 0800 and 0930 hr. Women completed the Kinsey scales of sexual orientation, and were either strictly heterosexual (HS; N=79) or not-strictly heterosexual (NHS; N=20). Photocopies of the two hands were collected, and participants completed the revised Vandenberg Mental Rotations test, the Paper Folding test, and a short version of the Guilford-Zimmerman Spatial Orientation Test. Results showed that NHS women exhibited superior spatial ability relative to HS women. No significant difference was found between the HS and NHS women in the 2D:4D digit ratio. There was no association between the digit ratio and spatial performance. These results support an association between increased spatial abilities and heteroflexible sexual orientation, which may possibly be mediated by high prenatal androgens.
Keywords:Prenatal androgen  Sexual orientation  Digit ratio  Spatial abilities  Mental rotation  Paper folding  Spatial navigation  2D:4D
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