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The effects of parental hormones on working memory processes

2011-01-22

heil_beste11_mental_rotation

Men outperform women in mental rotation by about one standard deviation. Prenatal exposure to testosterone has been suggested as one cause. In animals it has been shown that a female fetus located between two male ones is exposed to higher levels of testosterone. It is still unclear whether intra-uterine hormone transfer exists in humans. Therefore, the influence of an intra-uterine presence of a male co twin was studied in female fraternal twins (N=200). Women with a male co-twin outperformed women with a female co-twin by about a third standard deviation. In a no-twin control group (N=200), performance of women with a slightly older sibling did not depend upon the sibling's sex. These findings provide preliminary support for the theory of an influence of prenatal testosterone on mental rotation performance.

Heil, M., Kavsek, M., Rolke, B., Beste, C., Jansen, P. (2011). Mental rotation in female twins: evidence for intra-uterine hormone transfer?. Biol Psychol, 86, 90-93.

heil_beste11_mental_rotation

Men outperform women in mental rotation by about one standard deviation. Prenatal exposure to testosterone has been suggested as one cause. In animals it has been shown that a female fetus located between two male ones is exposed to higher levels of testosterone. It is still unclear whether intra-uterine hormone transfer exists in humans. Therefore, the influence of an intra-uterine presence of a male co twin was studied in female fraternal twins (N=200). Women with a male co-twin outperformed women with a female co-twin by about a third standard deviation. In a no-twin control group (N=200), performance of women with a slightly older sibling did not depend upon the sibling's sex. These findings provide preliminary support for the theory of an influence of prenatal testosterone on mental rotation performance.

Heil, M., Kavsek, M., Rolke, B., Beste, C., Jansen, P. (2011). Mental rotation in female twins: evidence for intra-uterine hormone transfer?. Biol Psychol, 86, 90-93.