Fr. 66.00

Maternal Personality, Evolution and the Sex Ratio - Do Mothers Control the Sex of the Infant?

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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Women who are dominant are more likely to have sons. Demographic studies show that more male children are born after wars, yet most people believe that their baby's sex is a matter of chance - determined by the father's sperm. Valerie Grant presents evidence that the mother's personality - which is related to female testosterone levels - can actually influence which type of sperm fertilises the egg.
Using data from human and animal studies Valerie Grant discusses the implications for human evolution, developmental psychology and reproductive biology. Her claims are controversial and the implications of her findings far reaching. Whether mothers have sons or daughters may not be a matter of chance. It may depend on which sex infant the mother is more suited to raise.

List of contents

Chapter 1 Overview; Chapter 2 Defining and Measuring Dominance; Chapter 3 The Biological Basis of Dominance; Chapter 4 Evidence From Biostatistics; Chapter 5 The Physiology of Sex Determination; Chapter 6 Dominance in Animals; Chapter 7 Dominance and the Sex Ratio in Animals; Chapter 8 The Sex Ratio in Humans; Chapter 9 Early Experience and Evolutionary Advantage; Chapter 10 Sex P References and Sex Selection;

About the author

Valerie J. Grant is Lecturer in Behavioural Science at the School of Medicine, University of Auckland, New Zealand.

Summary

Women who are dominant are more likely to have sons. Demographic studies show that more male children are born after wars, yet most people believe that their baby's sex is a matter of chance - determined by the father's sperm. Valerie Grant presents evidence that the mother's personality - which is related to female testosterone levels - can actually influence which type of sperm fertilises the egg.
Using data from human and animal studies Valerie Grant discusses the implications for human evolution, developmental psychology and reproductive biology. Her claims are controversial and the implications of her findings far reaching. Whether mothers have sons or daughters may not be a matter of chance. It may depend on which sex infant the mother is more suited to raise.

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