Zucker K J, Beaulieu N, Bradley S J, Grimshaw G M, Wilcox A
Child and Adolescent Gender Identity Clinic, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health-Clarke Division and University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2001 Sep;42(6):767-76. doi: 10.1111/1469-7610.00773.
Handedness preference was assessed in 205 boys with gender identity disorder and 205 clinical control boys referred for other reasons. Boys with gender identity disorder were significantly more likely to be left-handed than the clinical control boys (19.5% vs. 8.3%, respectively). The boys with gender identity disorder, but not the clinical control boys, also had a significantly higher rate of left-handedness compared to three independent, general population studies of nonreferred boys (11.8%; N = 14,253) by Hardyck, Goldman, and Petrinovich (1975), Calnan and Richardson (1976), and Eaton, Chipperfield, Ritchot, and Kostiuk (1996). Left-handedness appears to be a behavioral marker of an underlying neurobiological process associated with gender identity disorder in boys.
对205名患有性别认同障碍的男孩和205名因其他原因转诊的临床对照男孩进行了利手偏好评估。患有性别认同障碍的男孩比临床对照男孩更有可能是左利手(分别为19.5%和8.3%)。与Hardyck、Goldman和Petrinovich(1975年)、Calnan和Richardson(1976年)以及Eaton、Chipperfield、Ritchot和Kostiuk(1996年)对14253名未转诊男孩进行的三项独立的一般人群研究相比,患有性别认同障碍的男孩(而非临床对照男孩)的左利手率也显著更高(11.8%)。左利手似乎是与男孩性别认同障碍相关的潜在神经生物学过程的行为标志。