2015
DOI: 10.1017/thg.2015.22
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Twins Less Frequent Than Expected Among Male Births in Risk Averse Populations

Abstract: Male twin gestations exhibit higher incidence of fetal morbidity and mortality than singleton gestations. From an evolutionary perspective, the relatively high rates of infant and child mortality among male twins born into threatening environments reduce the fitness of these gestations, making them more vulnerable to fetal loss. Women do not perceive choosing to spontaneously abort gestations although the outcome may result from estimates, made without awareness, of the risks of continuing a pregnancy. Here, w… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Applying the three steps in our main test described above to the natural logarithm of the odds of a male among live singleton births yielded the results shown in Table 3. We found, consistent with the Bruce Effect and with timing reported in other literature (Karasek et al, 2015), that the secondary sex ratio dropped significantly 5 months after the Oslo Massacre.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 93%
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“…Applying the three steps in our main test described above to the natural logarithm of the odds of a male among live singleton births yielded the results shown in Table 3. We found, consistent with the Bruce Effect and with timing reported in other literature (Karasek et al, 2015), that the secondary sex ratio dropped significantly 5 months after the Oslo Massacre.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 93%
“…In non-human animals, the Bruce Effect may provide a female counterstrategy to infanticide, or may be an adaptive strategy to limit investment in gestations that face a high risk of death (Labov, 1981). Mechanisms associated with the Bruce Effect likely include the endocrine stress response (Beehner et al, 2005;Cheney & Seyfarth, 2009), suggesting that the Bruce Effect may be part of a generalized female reproductive response to environments that threaten offspring.Theory (Haig, 1999;Schooling, 2014;Stearns, 1987;Trivers & Willard, 1973;Wells, 2000) and empirical work in human populations (Bruckner et al, 2015;Karasek et al, 2015;Orzack et al, 2015) suggest that natural selection has conserved endemic selection in utero that allows women to spontaneously abort gestations least likely to yield grandchildren. Acute stressors on a population appear, moreover,…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…We acknowledge that invoking the construct of gestational loss aversion, despite its intuitive appeal, raises issues we cannot address with our data. Other literature (Karasek et al., ) has, for example, asked whether women who exhibit gestational loss aversion also exhibit loss aversion in investment choices they can describe making. Research suggests they may because the male twin ratio of birth cohorts, which measures the spontaneous abortion of the smaller of male twin fetuses, falls in Sweden when households report rising economic risk aversion (Karasek et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other literature (Karasek et al., ) has, for example, asked whether women who exhibit gestational loss aversion also exhibit loss aversion in investment choices they can describe making. Research suggests they may because the male twin ratio of birth cohorts, which measures the spontaneous abortion of the smaller of male twin fetuses, falls in Sweden when households report rising economic risk aversion (Karasek et al., ). The literature also reports that Danish conception cohorts that yield more than expected spontaneous abortions also yield more than expected elective abortion of gestations with no clinical indication of fetal defect (Catalano, Bruckner, et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%