Papadatou-Pastou Marietta, Martin Maryanne, Munafò Marcus R, Jones Gregory V
Department of Experimental Psychology.
Department of Psychology.
Psychol Bull. 2008 Sep;134(5):677-699. doi: 10.1037/a0012814.
Human handedness, a marker for language lateralization in the brain, continues to attract great research interest. A widely reported but not universal finding is a greater male tendency toward left-handedness. Here the authors present a meta-analysis of k = 144 studies, totaling N = 1,787,629 participants, the results of which demonstrate that the sex difference is both significant and robust. The overall best estimate for the male to female odds ratio was 1.23 (95% confidence interval = 1.19, 1.27). The widespread observation of this sex difference is consistent with it being related to innate characteristics of sexual differentiation, and its observed magnitude places an important constraint on current theories of handedness. In addition, the size of the sex difference was significantly moderated by the way in which handedness was assessed (by writing hand or by other means), the location of testing, and the year of publication of the study, implicating additional influences on its development.
人类用手习惯是大脑语言功能区偏侧化的一个标志,一直吸引着众多研究兴趣。一个被广泛报道但并非普遍存在的发现是,男性左利手的倾向更强。本文作者对144项研究进行了荟萃分析,总计纳入1,787,629名参与者,结果表明这种性别差异既显著又稳健。男性与女性的优势比总体最佳估计值为1.23(95%置信区间 = 1.19, 1.27)。对这种性别差异的广泛观察结果与它和性别分化的先天特征有关这一观点相符,并且观察到的差异程度对当前的用手习惯理论构成了重要限制。此外,用手习惯的评估方式(通过书写手或其他方式)、测试地点以及研究发表年份对性别差异的大小有显著调节作用,这意味着还有其他因素影响其发展。