Carter-Saltzman L
Science. 1980 Sep 12;209(4462):1263-5. doi: 10.1126/science.7403887.
Data from adoption studies on handedness indicate that the effects of shared biological heritage are more powerful determinants of hand preference than sociocultural factors. Biological offspring were found to show nonrandom distributions of right- and non-right-handedness as a function of parental handedness; these distributions were consistent with the results fo previous family studies. In contrast, the handedness distribution of adopted children as a function of parental handedness was essentially random.
关于用手习惯的领养研究数据表明,共同的生物遗传影响比社会文化因素更能决定用手偏好。研究发现,亲生子女表现出右手偏好和非右手偏好的非随机分布,这是父母用手习惯的函数;这些分布与之前家庭研究的结果一致。相比之下,领养儿童的用手习惯分布作为父母用手习惯的函数基本是随机的。