Facts and misconceptions about 2d:4d, social and risk preferences

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Abstract

We study how the ratio between the length of the second and fourth digit (2D:4D) correlates with choices in social and risk preferences elicitation tasks by building a large dataset from five experimental projects with more than 800 subjects. Our results confirm the recent literature that downplays the link between 2D:4D and many domains of economic interest, such as social and risk preferences. As for the former, we find that social preferences are significantly lower when 2D:4D is above the median value only for subjects with low cognitive ability. As for the latter, we find that a high 2D:4D is not correlated with the frequency of subjects’ risky choices.

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Alonso, J., Di Paolo, R., Ponti, G., & Sartarelli, M. (2018). Facts and misconceptions about 2d:4d, social and risk preferences. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00022

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