| Literature DB >> 32183625 |
Ray Blanchard1, Jurian Krupp2, Doug P VanderLaan3, Paul L Vasey4, Kenneth J Zucker1.
Abstract
The fraternal birth order effect (FBOE) is the finding that older brothers increase the probability of homosexuality in later-born males, and the female fecundity effect (FFE) is the finding that the mothers of homosexual males produce more offspring than the mothers of heterosexual males. In a recent paper, Khovanova proposed a novel method for computing independent estimates of these effects on the same samples and expressing the magnitude and direction of the effects in the same metric. In her procedure, only families with one or two sons are examined, and daughters are ignored. The present study investigated the performance of Khovanova's method using archived data from 10 studies, comprising 14 samples totalling 5390 homosexual and heterosexual subjects. The effect estimate for the FBOE showed that an increase from zero older brothers to one older brother is associated with a 38% increase in the odds of homosexuality. By contrast, the effect estimate for the FFE showed that the increase from zero younger brothers to one younger brother is not associated with any increase in the odds of homosexuality. The former result supports the maternal immune hypothesis of male homosexuality; the latter result does not support the balancing selection hypothesis.Entities:
Keywords: balancing selection; female fecundity; fraternal birth order; homosexuality; maternal immunization; older brothers
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32183625 PMCID: PMC7126035 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2019.2907
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349
Studies in the meta-analyses.
| authors | description of the sample | per cent data loss | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blanchard & Bogaert [ | Canadian volunteers | 736 | 507 | 31 |
| Blanchard | Canadian men (e.g. adoptees) reared in environments other than biological families: ‘Bogaert (non-biological families)’ subsample | 502 | 386 | 23 |
| Blanchard | Canadian homosexual community volunteers and heterosexual university students: ‘Bogaert (Other)’ subsample | 415 | 295 | 29 |
| Blanchard | Canadian patients referred to a specialty clinic, phallometrically diagnosed as homosexual or heterosexual hebephiles | 783 | 436 | 44 |
| Blanchard | Canadian patients referred to a specialty clinic, phallometrically diagnosed as homosexual or heterosexual paedophiles | 242 | 147 | 39 |
| Blanchard | Canadian patients referred to a specialty clinic, phallometrically diagnosed as homosexual or heterosexual teleiophiles | 1089 | 628 | 42 |
| Blanchard | British and American volunteers, from earlier studies by Siegelman [ | 610 | 477 | 22 |
| Ellis & Blanchard [ | American and Canadian volunteers | 1146 | 836 | 27 |
| Khorashad | Iranian homosexual male-to-female transsexuals and heterosexual cissexual psychiatric patients | 164 | 53 | 68 |
| Krupp (H) (J Krupp 2014, unpublished manuscript) | German patients self-referred for homosexual or heterosexual hebephilia or hebeteleiophilia, from the study by Beier | 113 | 99 | 12 |
| Krupp (P) (J Krupp 2014, unpublished manuscript) | German patients self-referred for homosexual or heterosexual paedophilia or paedohebephilia, from study by Beier | 55 | 48 | 13 |
| Schagen | Dutch biologically male, peripubertal gender-dysphoric patients and presumably cissexual heterosexual adolescent controls | 969 | 834 | 14 |
| VanderLaan & Vasey [ | Samoan transgender same-sex-attracted males ( | 538 | 176 | 67 |
| VanderLaan | Canadian children and adolescents referred to a child and adolescent gender identity clinic | 556 | 468 | 16 |
Numbers of heterosexual and homosexual subjects in one-son and two-son families.
| first and only son | first of two sons | second of two sons | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| study | heterosexual | homosexual | heterosexual | homosexual | heterosexual | homosexual |
| Blanchard & Bogaert [ | 134 | 97 | 94 | 46 | 76 | 60 |
| Blanchard | 118 | 147 | 40 | 40 | 18 | 23 |
| Blanchard | 59 | 87 | 27 | 32 | 36 | 54 |
| Blanchard | 181 | 16 | 111 | 16 | 104 | 8 |
| Blanchard | 41 | 24 | 34 | 11 | 15 | 22 |
| Blanchard | 254 | 19 | 189 | 15 | 133 | 18 |
| Blanchard | 114 | 152 | 36 | 69 | 36 | 70 |
| Ellis & Blanchard [ | 353 | 55 | 193 | 28 | 172 | 35 |
| Khorashad | 6 | 11 | 7 | 5 | 12 | 12 |
| Krupp (H) (J Krupp 2014, unpublished manuscript) | 47 | 14 | 14 | 7 | 10 | 7 |
| Krupp (P) (J Krupp 2014, unpublished manuscript) | 15 | 11 | 6 | 6 | 5 | 5 |
| Schagen | 419 | 27 | 178 | 23 | 160 | 27 |
| VanderLaan & Vasey [ | 40 | 13 | 44 | 13 | 48 | 18 |
| VanderLaan | 88 | 140 | 52 | 75 | 35 | 78 |
Figure 1.Forest plot and inferential statistics for the meta-analysis of the FBOE. ‘Events’ refers to homosexual subjects, and ‘Total’ refers to all subjects. The lozenge-shaped object at the bottom of the forest plot represents the pooled estimate of the odds ratio and its 95% confidence interval. See text for additional explanation. (Online version in colour.)
Figure 2.Funnel plot for the FBOE odds ratios. The triangle formed by the dashed lines represents a 95% confidence interval. (Online version in colour.)
Figure 3.Forest plot and inferential statistics for the meta-analysis of the FFE. ‘Events’ refers to homosexual subjects, and ‘Total’ refers to all subjects. The lozenge-shaped object at the bottom of the forest plot represents the pooled estimate of the odds ratio and its 95% confidence interval. See text for additional explanation. (Online version in colour.)
Figure 4.Funnel plot for the FFE odds ratios. The triangle formed by the dashed lines represents a 95% confidence interval. (Online version in colour.)