Literature DB >> 28804762

"Super Bowl Babies": Do Counties with Super Bowl Winning Teams Experience Increases in Births Nine Months Later?

George M Hayward1, Anna Rybińska1.   

Abstract

Following the claim of a highly publicized National Football League (NFL) commercial, we test whether the Super Bowl provides a positive exogenous shock to fertility in counties of winning teams. Using stadium locations to identify teams' counties, we analyze the number of births in counties of both winning and losing teams for ten recent Super Bowls. We also test for state effects and general effects of the NFL playoffs. Overall, our results show no clear pattern of increases in the number of births in winning counties nine months after the Super Bowl. We also do not find that births are affected at the state level or that counties competing in the playoffs are affected. Altogether, these results cast doubt on the NFL's claim that winning cities experience increases in births nine months after the Super Bowl.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Super Bowl; birth rates; fertility; football; sporting events

Year:  2017        PMID: 28804762      PMCID: PMC5548444          DOI: 10.1177/2378023117718122

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Socius        ISSN: 2378-0231


  16 in total

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9.  Testosterone changes during vicarious experiences of winning and losing among fans at sporting events.

Authors:  P C Bernhardt; J M Dabbs; J A Fielden; C D Lutter
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10.  Dominance, politics, and physiology: voters' testosterone changes on the night of the 2008 United States presidential election.

Authors:  Steven J Stanton; Jacinta C Beehner; Ekjyot K Saini; Cynthia M Kuhn; Kevin S Labar
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