The Relation between Handedness Indices and Reproductive Success in a Non-Industrial Society

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Abstract

The evolution of handedness in human populations has intrigued scientists for decades. However, whether handedness really affects Darwinian fitness is unclear and not yet studied in a non-industrial society where selection pressures on health and handedness are likely to be similar to the situation in which handedness has evolved. We measured both hand preference and asymmetry of hand skill (speed of fine motor control, measured by a pegboard task, and accuracy of throwing), as they measure different aspects of handedness. We investigated the associations between both the direction (left versus right) and strength (the degree to which a certain preference or asymmetry in skill is manifested, independent of the direction) of handedness. We analyzed to what extent these measures predict the number of offspring and self-reported illness in a non-industrial society in Papua, Indonesia. As it is known that body height and fitness are correlated, data on body height was also collected. Due to low numbers of left-handers we could not investigate the associations between direction of hand preference and measures of Darwinian fitness. We found a positive association between strength of asymmetry of hand skill (pegboard) and the number of children men sired. We also found a positive association for men between strength of hand preference and number of children who died within the first three years of life. For women we found no such effects. Our results may indicate that strength of handedness, independent of direction, has fitness implications and that the persistence of the polymorphism in handedness may be ascribed to either balancing selection on strength of asymmetry of hand skill versus strength of hand preference, or sexual antagonistic selection. No relationships between health and handedness were found, perhaps due to disease related selective disappearance of subjects with a specific handedness. © 2013 Schaafsma et al.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Histograms of number of children alive at the time of research (grey) and deceased (black) per age group of mothers (left panel) and fathers (right panel).
  • Table 1. Number of children born, died within 3 years of life and still alive at the time of the study.
  • Table 2. Sample size, mean, standard deviation (std. dev.), minimum and maximum of variables used in the statistical models following a normal distribution and median, variance, minimum and maximum of the variables not following a normal distribution.
  • Figure 2. The relationship in fathers between strength of hand skill, measured with the pegboard task and for graphical purposes categorized in 10 groups of equal widths, and number of children born (mean and standard errors).
  • Figure 3. The relationship in fathers between strength of hand preference and number of children deceased in the first three years of life (mean and standard errors).
  • Table 4. Regression analyses of the associations between different measures of handedness and self-reported illness.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Schaafsma, S. M., Geuze, R. H., Lust, J. M., Schiefenhövel, W., & Groothuis, T. G. G. (2013). The Relation between Handedness Indices and Reproductive Success in a Non-Industrial Society. PLoS ONE, 8(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063114

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