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What does the length of your finger tell you?

CardSharp

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Take a look at your right-hand. Which of your fingers is longer: your ring finger, or your index finger? Surprisingly, a passing stranger who noticed a difference in length between these two fingers might infer some very personal characteristics about you. With no more data than that gleaned from a passing glance at your hands, a stranger might infer whether you are likely to have homosexual inclinations, are highly fertile, may eventually suffer from a heart attack or breast cancer, have musical aptitude or sporting prowess, and a surprisingly long list of other characteristics.

Why do the fingers reveal such a wide spectrum of information (albeit very probabilistic)? Scientists reviews evidence to suggest that the ratio of the length between the ring and index finger is somewhat sexually dimorphic, that this ratio is determined during early fetal development, and that it is influenced by sex hormones, particularly testosterone. If this is true, the fingers may provide a permanent, and easily visible, historic marker of important hormonal events that occurred during a critical time of fetal development, the latter part of the first trimester. This is a critical time of sexual differentiation of both the brain and body.

Specifically, it is the ratio of the length of the index finger (digit 2, or "2D") and the ring finger (digit 4, or "4D") that is sexually dimorphic. Generally, males have a ring finger that is longer than their index finger. Females typically have index and ring fingers of about the same length. The ratio of index finger length to ring finger length is called the “2D:4D digit ratio,” or more simply, the “digit ratio.” Scientists reports that, for males, the index finger is generally about 96 percent of the length of the ring finger, which gives an average digit ratio for males of .96. The digit ratio would be 1.00 if the ring and index fingers were the same length, and greater than 1.00 if the index finger was longer than the ring finger. Males generally have a digit ratio below 1.00 -- they have what is termed a "low digit ratio." Women generally have a digit ratio of about 1.00 (the index and ring fingers are of about equal length), or a "high digit ratio."

Scientists links the proximate causes of digit ratio sexual dimorphism to the effects of sex hormones during early fetal development. He believes the evidence is persuasive, but not yet definitive, that higher levels of testosterone during this critical developmental stage facilitates the growth of the ring finger, while higher levels of estrogen facilitates the growth of the index finger. He states: “In general, it seems that 2D:4D is the most reliable of the predictors of hypermasculinization…” (p. 139). One of the consequences of hypermasculinization, as reflected by the digit ratio, may be higher levels of fertility in men and lower levels of fertility in women. He also suggests that hypermasculinization increases the likelihood of homosexuality or bisexuality, in both males and females.

Scientists devotes separate chapters to explore the relationship between digit ratio and a variety of characteristics, including assertiveness and attractiveness , reproductive success, hand preference, verbal fluency, autism, and depression (chapter 5), health and disease , homosexuality, musical aptitude and sports aptitude . A brief summary Scientist's findings (some of which are quite preliminary) is presented below.




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Interesting!!!!!!

where you go this from?
 
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Supposedly an excited penis is three times the length of a man's thumb.
 
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Eh sounds intresting but no. I don't think lenth of your fingers determains your chractristcs. This just another twisted version of astrology IMO.
 
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my ring fingers are shorter than my index fingers but i would be the last person anyone would think of being a homo.
 
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Eh sounds intresting but no. I don't think lenth of your fingers determains your chractristcs. This just another twisted version of astrology IMO.

Digit ratios is backed up by science, Gambit's wank comment is not, but it may be his original research.


Austin, E. J., Manning, J. T., McInroy, K., & Mathews, E. (2002). An investigation of the association between personality, cognitive ability and digit ratio. Personality and Individual Differences, 33, 1115-1124.

Bailey, A. A., & Hurd, P. L. (2005). Depression in men is associated with more feminine finger length ratios. Personality and Individual Differences, 39, 829-836.

Beech, J. R., & Mackintosh, I. C. (2005). Do differences in sex hormones affect handwriting style? Evidence from digit ratio and sex role identity as determinants of the sex of handwriting. Personality and Individual Differences, 39, 459-468.

Brown, W. M., Hines, M., Fane, B. A., & Breedlove, S. M. (2002). Masculinized finger-length patterns in human males and females withcongenital adrenal hyperplasia. Hormones and Behavior, 42, 380-386.

Csatho, A., Osvath, A., Bicsak, E., Karadi, K., Manning, J., & Kallai, J. (2003). Sex role identity related to the ratio of second to fourth digit length in women. Biological Psychology, 62, 147-156.

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Hall, L. S., & love, C. T. (2003). Finger length ratios in female monozygotic twins discordant for sexual orientation. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 32, 23-28.

Hines, M. (2000). Gonadal hormones and sexual differentiation of human behaviour: effects on psychosexual and cognitive development. In A. Matsumoto (Ed.), Sexual differentiation of the brain (pp. 257-278). Florida: CRC Press.

Kempel, P., Gohlke, B., Klempau, J., Zinsberger, P., Reuter, M., & Hennig, J. (2005). Second-to-fourth digit length, testosterone and spatial ability. Intelligence, 33, 215-230.

Kratochvil, L., & Flegr, J. (2009). Differences in the 2nd to 4th digit length ratio in humans reflect shifts along the common allometric line. Biology Letters, 5, 643-646.

Kuepper, Y., & Hennig, J. (2007). Behavioral aggression is associated with the 2D:4D ratio in men but not in women. Journal of Individual Differences, 28, 64-72.

Lippa, R. A. (2006). Finger length, 2D:4D ratios, and their relation to gender-related personality traits and the Big five. Biological Psychology, 71, 116-121.

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Manning, J. T., Bundred, P. E., Newton, D. J., & Flanagan, B. F. (2003). The second to fourth digit ratio and variation in the androgen receptor gene. Evolution and Human Behavior, 24, 399-405.

Manning, J. T., Scutt, D., Wilson, J., & Lewis-Jones, D. I. (1998). The ratio of 2nd to 4th digit length: A predictor of sperm numbers and concentrations of testosterone, luteinizing hormone, and estrogen. Human Reproduction, 13, 3000-3004.

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Voracek, M., & Pavlovic, S. (2007). The tell-tale hand: The relationship of 2D:4D to perceived attractiveness, sex typicality, and other attributes of palms. Journal of Individual Differences, 28, 88-97.

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Williams, T. J., Pepitine, M. E., Christensen, S. E., Cooke, B. M., Huberman, A. D., Breedlove, N. J., et al. (2000). Finger length ratio and sexual orientation. Nature, 404, 455-456.
 
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My ring and index are the exact same size. But if i flip my hand over [opposite of the example pics] ring finger looks longer.
 
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