Green R, Roberts C W, Williams K, Goodman M, Mixon A
Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Science, UCLA School of Medicine.
Br J Psychiatry. 1987 Jul;151:84-8. doi: 10.1192/bjp.151.1.84.
Data from a group of males aged 13 to 23, who as children exhibited extensive cross-gender behaviour, was analysed. In boyhood they frequently played with dress-up dolls, role-played as females, dressed in girls' clothes, stated the wish to be girls, primarily had girls as friends, and avoided rough-and-tumble play. The majority of the group evolved a bisexual or homosexual orientation; two types of behaviour, boyhood doll play and female role-playing, were found to be associated with later homosexual orientation. The findings suggest developmental associations between specific types of boyhood cross-gender behaviour and the objects of later sexual arousal.