Journal article
Sex-Linked Behavior: Evolution, Stability, and Variability
Cordelia Fine, John Dupre, Daphna Joel
TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES | ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON | Published : 2017
Abstract
Common understanding of human sex-linked behaviors is that proximal mechanisms of genetic and hormonal sex, ultimately shaped by the differential reproductive challenges of ancestral males and females, act on the brain to transfer sex-linked predispositions across generations. Here, we extend the debate on the role of nature and nurture in the development of traits in the lifetime of an individual, to their role in the cross-generation transfer of traits. Advances in evolutionary theory that posit the environment as a source of trans-generational stability, and new understanding of sex effects on the brain, suggest that the cross-generation stability of sex-linked patterns of behavior are so..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by European Research Council under the European Union
Awarded by Israel Science Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
C.F. is grateful for the support of a Women's Leadership Institute Australia Fellowship. J.D's research leading to this article has received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013)/ERC Grant Agreement 324186. D.J. acknowledges the support of the Israel Science Foundation (grant No. 217/16).