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  6. Finger ridge-counts correlate with the second to fourth digit ratio [post-print]
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Finger ridge-counts correlate with the second to fourth digit ratio [post-print]

Source Publication
American Journal of Human Biology
Date Issued
May 31, 2021
Author(s)
Jantz, Richard  
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajhb.23625
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/15343
Abstract

Objectives


This study examines the relationship of finger ridge-counts to second to fourth digit ratio, which has not yet been definitively demonstrated. The related question of sex dimorphism in finger ridge-counts is further elucidated.

Methods

A sample of Germans, including 1134 males and 1031 females, was examined for sex dimorphism in the finger ridge-counts. Second and fourth digit lengths were measured in a sub-sample of 91 males and 100 females to compute second to fourth digit ratio. Principal component scores were obtained to investigate sex dimorphism and the correlation between ridge-counts and digit ratio. Regression and analysis of covariance were used to investigate relationships.

Results

Males generally have higher ridge-counts than females but subtle dimorphic features emerge from the principal components, such as a contrast between digits 2 and 4, suggesting a ratio analogous to the digit ratio. The most dimorphic feature is digit 1 directional asymmetry, males exhibiting a stronger right bias than females. Digit ratio is significantly related to four principal components, expressing various contrasts among digits. Other relationships involve contrasts between digits 3 and 5 and asymmetry on digit 2.

Conclusions

This paper provides definitive evidence that finger ridge-counts correlate with second to fourth digit ratio. The most important finding is that associations of ridge-counts with digit ratio do not involve commonly used summary counts over all digits. Rather, associations act more locally, in ways paralleling the digit ratio, in others reflecting asymmetry. The results support the idea that prenatal sex hormones affect finger ridge-counts.

Subjects

finger ridge-counts

prenatal hormones

digit ratio

sex dimorphism

asymmetry

Disciplines
Anthropology
Biological and Physical Anthropology
Comments

This is a post-print, author-produced PDF of an article published in American Journal of Human Biology. Citation information below:


Jantz, R. L. (2021). Finger ridge-counts correlate with the second to fourth digit ratio (2d:4d). American Journal of Human Biology, e23625. https://doi.org/10.1002/ ajhb.23625

This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions.

The pre-print version of the article is also available in TRACE: https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_anthpubs/7/

Submission Type
Post-print
Embargo Date
May 31, 2022
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

jantz_2021_ajhb.23625.pdf

Size

1.25 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

d6fdc35d14be9a77f9a5e7f312956ca3

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