Masculine Girls and Feminine Boys: Genetic and Environmental Contributions to Atypical Gender Development in Early Childhood.
- 1 January 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
- Vol. 88 (2) , 400-412
- https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.88.2.400
Abstract
In this genetic study of atypical gender role development, parents of 5,799 twin pairs, ages 3 and 4, rated their twin children's masculinity and femininity. Boys were selected as gender atypical if they were highly feminine (top 5%, 10%, or 15%) relative to other boys, and girls were selected if they were highly masculine relative to other girls. Gender-atypical boys and girls were each divided into 2 groups: fully gender atypical (e.g., feminine boys also low on masculinity) and partially gender atypical (e.g., feminine boys who are not low on masculinity). DeFries-Fulker (DF; J. C. DeFries & D. W. Fulker, 1985, 1988) extremes analysis yielded moderate group heritability and substantial shared environment effects for atypical gender role behavior. However, for fully gender-atypical girls, group heritability accounted for most of the variance, and shared environment had no effect. The results are discussed in light of past studies and potential implications for atypical gender development.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phenotypic g early in life: On the etiology of general cognitive ability in a large population sample of twin children aged 2–4 yearsIntelligence, 2003
- Sex‐typed preferences in three domains: Do two‐year‐olds need cognitive variables?British Journal of Psychology, 2002
- Are parents' gender schemas related to their children's gender-related cognitions? A meta-analysis.Developmental Psychology, 2002
- Number of X-linked androgen receptor gene CAG repeats and femininity in womenPersonality and Individual Differences, 1999
- Gender labeling, gender stereotyping, and parenting behaviors.Developmental Psychology, 1992
- Sexual orientation, sexual identity, and sex-dimorphic behaviors in male twinsBehavior Genetics, 1991
- Masculinity and Femininity in Twin Children: Genetic and Environmental FactorsChild Development, 1989
- Multiple regression analysis of twin dataBehavior Genetics, 1985
- Sources of variability in sex-linked personality attributes: A twin study.Developmental Psychology, 1982
- Consequences of Moderate Cross-Gender Behavior in Preschool ChildrenChild Development, 1977