Wf. Mckeever et al., MATERNAL AGE AND PARITY CORRELATES OF HANDEDNESS - GENDER, BUT NO PARENTAL HANDEDNESS MODULATION OF EFFECTS, Cortex, 31(3), 1995, pp. 543-553
Mothers supplied information on the handedness of a total of 1079 chil
dren (238 left handed, 841 right handed), and also reported informatio
n on the handedness of the biological parents, parental ages when each
child was born, parity, and birth complications. A MANOVA, employing
offspring handedness and parental handedness (presence versus absence
of at least one left hander) as the bases of classification, and parit
y, maternal age, paternal age, and a birth stress composite score as d
ependent measures, was applied to the data of female and male offsprin
g separately. For females, there was a significant multivariate effect
for handedness, but no effect of parental handedness nor any interact
ion of the handedness and parental handedness factors. Univariate ANOV
As, following the multivariate analysis, showed significant effects of
handedness for the maternal age and parity measures, but not for pate
rnal age or birth stress composite score. The analysis for males showe
d no significant multivariate or univariate effects. The data suggest,
that in the absence of high risk parity and maternal age over 32, onl
y about 7.8% of females are left handed. This implies that as many as
29% or so of female left handers may owe their sinistrality to factors
associated with high risk parity and maternal ages over 32.