Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4312310 Behavioural Brain Research 2016 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•First study to examine the effects of prenatal testosterone on blood flow during speech.•Prenatal testosterone as indicated by digit ratio was not related to speech representation.•There was no association between sex and speech representation.•The results are inconsistent with androgen theories of cerebral lateralisation.

The relative length of the second and fourth digits (2D:4D ratio) is sexually dimorphic and a retrospective biomarker of prenatal hormonal exposure. Low ratios indicate higher prenatal testosterone (pT) and lower estrogen exposure, whereas the reverse pattern is associated with high ratios. Elevated levels of pT exposure have long been thought to modulate hemispheric specialisation; subsequently many studies use the 2D:4D ratio as a proxy index for pT to examine the effects of prenatal hormonal exposure on lateralised cognitive abilities. Here we used Transcranial Doppler ultrasonography and digit ratio to investigate whether pT has an influence on speech laterality. We tested 34 right and 14 left handed adults. Our results indicate that speech representation is unrelated to digit characteristics and therefore purportedly pT. We discuss these findings in relation to androgen theories of lateralisation.

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