fbpx
Wikipedia

Birth order

Birth order refers to the order a child is born in their family; first-born and second-born are examples. Birth order is often believed to have a profound and lasting effect on psychological development. This assertion has been repeatedly challenged.[1] Recent research has consistently found that earlier born children score slightly higher on average on measures of intelligence, but has found zero, or almost zero, robust effect of birth order on personality.[2] Nevertheless, the notion that birth-order significantly influences personality continues to have a strong presence in pop psychology and popular culture.[3][4]

Theory edit

Alfred Adler (1870–1937), an Austrian psychiatrist, and a contemporary of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung, was one of the first theorists to suggest that birth order influences personality. He argued that birth order can leave an indelible impression on an individual's style of life, which is one's habitual way of dealing with the tasks of friendship, love, and work. According to Adler, firstborns are "dethroned" when a second child comes along, and this loss of perceived privilege and primacy may have a lasting influence on them. Middle children may feel ignored or overlooked, causing them to develop the so-called middle child syndrome. Younger and only children may be pampered and spoiled, which was suggested to affect their later personalities.[5] All of this assumes what Adler believed to be a typical family situation, e.g., a nuclear family living apart from the extended family, without the children being orphaned, with average spacing between births, without twins and other multiples, and with surviving children not having severe physical, intellectual, or psychiatric disabilities.

Since Adler's time, the influence of birth order on the development of personality has become a controversial issue in psychology. Among the general public, it is widely believed that personality is strongly influenced by birth order, but many psychologists dispute this. One modern theory of personality states that the Big Five personality traits of Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism represent most of the important elements of personality that can be measured. Contemporary empirical research shows that birth order does not influence the Big Five personality traits.[6]

In his 1996 book Born to Rebel, Frank Sulloway suggested that birth order had powerful effects on the Big Five personality traits. He argued that firstborns were much more conscientious and socially dominant, less agreeable, and less open to new ideas compared to laterborns.[7] However, critics such as Fred Townsend, Toni Falbo, and Judith Rich Harris, argue against Sulloway's theories. A full issue of Politics and the Life Sciences, dated September, 2000 but not published until 2004[8] due to legal threats from Sulloway, contains carefully and rigorously researched criticisms of Sulloway's theories and data. Subsequent large independent multi-cohort studies have revealed approximately zero effect of birth order on personality.[9]

In their book Sibling Relationships: Their Nature and Significance across the Lifespan, Michael E. Lamb and Brian Sutton-Smith argue that as individuals continually adjust to competing demands of socialization agents and biological tendencies, any effects of birth order may be eliminated, reinforced, or altered by later experiences.[10]

Within "Investigating the effects birth order has on personality, self-esteem, satisfaction with life and age", a study presented by Sharon Johnson, it is determined that first-born children are presented the initial opportunity to find a "personal niche" in their family. Due to them being the first to arrive, first-born children tend to form the strongest bond with their parents and will be the most likely to attempt to 'please' them by wanting to be the most responsible sibling. Middle-born children tend to show a lack of attachment to their parents and the whole family unit, with reports showing that middle-born children are less likely to state that they felt loved during childhood. Due to this lack of attachment, middle-born children also prove to be more self-sufficient, as they are also less likely to turn to a parent when they are in need. Last-born children show remarkable similarities to first-born siblings in personality, the exception being that last-born children will not attempt to 'please' their parents nearly as much as first-borns.

Personality edit

 
The Marx Brothers in birth order, oldest at top

Claims about birth order effects on personality have received much attention in scientific research, with the National Academy of Sciences in the USA concluding that effects are zero[6] or near zero.[11] Such research is a challenge because of the difficulty of controlling all the variables that are statistically related to birth order. Family size, and a number of social and demographic variables are associated with birth order and serve as potential confounds. For example, large families are generally lower in socioeconomic status than small families. Hence third-born children are not only third in birth order, but they are also more likely to come from larger, poorer families than firstborn children. If third-born children have a particular trait, it may be due to birth order, or it may be due to family size, or to any number of other variables. Consequently, there are a large number of published studies on birth order that are confounded.

Literature reviews that have examined many studies and attempted to control for confounding variables tend to find minimal effects for birth order. Ernst and Angst reviewed all of the research published between 1946 and 1980. They also did their own study on a representative sample of 6,315 young men from Switzerland. They found no substantial effects of birth order and concluded that birth order research was a "waste of time."[12] More recent research analyzed data from a national sample of 9,664 subjects on the Big Five personality traits of extraversion, neuroticism, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness to experience. Contrary to Sulloway's predictions, they found no significant correlation between birth order and self-reported personality. There was, however, some tendency for people to perceive birth order effects when they were aware of the birth order of an individual.[13]

Smaller studies have partially supported Sulloway's claims. Paulhus and colleagues reported that first borns scored higher on conservatism, conscientiousness and achievement orientation, and later borns higher on rebelliousness, openness, and agreeableness. The authors argued that the effect emerges most clearly from studies within families. Results are weak at best, when individuals from different families are compared. The reason is that genetic effects are stronger than birth order effects.[14] Recent studies also support the claim that only children are not markedly different from their peers with siblings. Scientists have found that they share many characteristics with firstborn children including being conscientious as well as parent-oriented.[15]

In her review of the research, Judith Rich Harris suggests that birth order effects may exist within the context of the family of origin, but that they are not enduring aspects of personality. When people are with their parents and siblings, firstborns behave differently from laterborns, even during adulthood. However, most people don't spend their adult lives in their childhood home. Harris provides evidence that the patterns of behavior acquired in the childhood home don't affect the way people behave outside the home, even during childhood. Harris concludes that birth order effects keep turning up because people keep looking for them, and keep analyzing and reanalyzing their data until they find them.[16]

Intelligence edit

Several studies have found that first borns have slightly higher IQ than later borns.[17][2] Such data are, however, confounded with family size,[11] which is in turn correlated with IQ confounds, such as social status.

Robert Zajonc argued for a "confluence" model in which the lack of siblings experienced by first borns exposes them to the more intellectual adult family environment. This predicts similar increases in IQ for siblings who next-oldest sibling is at least five years senior. These children are considered to be "functional firstborns". The theory further predicts that firstborns will be more intelligent than only children, because the latter will not benefit from the "tutor effect" (i.e. teaching younger siblings).[18]

In a metanalysis, Polit and Falbo (1988) found that firstborns, only children, and children with one sibling all score higher on tests of verbal ability than later-borns and children with multiple siblings.[19] This supports the conclusion that parents who have smaller families also have children with higher IQs. Resource dilution theory (RDT) suggests that siblings divert resources from each other. The metanalysis, however, found no such effect. Additional claims have been made, for instance that siblings compete for parental affection and other resources via academic achievement balancing out confluence effects.

 
Three siblings from the 1890s

The claim that firstborns have higher IQ scores has been disputed. Data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth show no relationship between birth order and intelligence.[1] Likewise, data from the National Child Development Study in the United Kingdom has failed to support the hypothesis. It states that "the analyses support the admixture hypothesis, which avers that the apparent birth-order effect on intelligence is an artifact of family size".[20]

Sexual orientation edit

The fraternal birth order effect is the name given to the theory that the more older brothers a man has, the greater the probability is that he will have a homosexual orientation. The fraternal birth order effect is said to be the strongest known predictor of sexual orientation, with each older brother increasing a man's odds of being gay by approximately 33%.[21][22] (One of the largest studies to date, however, suggests a smaller effect, of 15% higher odds.[23][24]) Even so, the fraternal birth order effect only accounts for a maximum of one seventh of the prevalence of homosexuality in men. There seems to be no effect on sexual orientation in women, and no effect of the number of older sisters.

In Homosexuality, Birth Order, and Evolution: Toward an Equilibrium Reproductive Economics of Homosexuality, Edward M. Miller suggests that the birth order effect on homosexuality may be a by-product of an evolved mechanism that shifts personality away from heterosexuality in laterborn sons.[25] According to Miller, this would have the consequence of reducing the probability of these sons engaging in unproductive competition with each other. Evolution may have favored biological mechanisms prompting human parents to exert affirmative pressure toward heterosexual behavior in earlier-born children: As more children in a family survive infancy and early childhood, the continued existence of the parents' gene line becomes more assured (cf. the pressure on newly-wed European aristocrats, especially young brides, to produce "an heir and a spare"), and the benefits of encouraging heterosexuality weigh less strongly against the risk of psychological damage that a strongly heteronormative environment poses to a child predisposed toward homosexuality.

More recently, this birth order effect on sexuality in males has been attributed to a very specific biological occurrence. As the mother gives birth to more sons, she is thought to develop an immunity to certain male-specific antigens. This immunity then leads to an effect in the brain that has to do with sexual preference. Yet this biological effect is seen only in right-handed males. If not right-handed, the number of older brothers has been found to have no prediction on the sexuality of a younger brother. This has led researchers to consider if the genes for sexuality and handedness are somehow related.[26]

Not all studies, including some with large, nationally representative samples, have been able to replicate the fraternal birth order effect. Some did not find any statistically significant difference in the sibling composition of gay and straight men;[27][28] this includes the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health,[29] the largest U.S. study with relevant data on the subject. Furthermore, at least one study, on the familial correlates of joining a same-sex union or marriage in a sample of two million people in Denmark, found that the only sibling correlate of joining a same-sex union among men was having older sisters, not older brothers.[30]

Traditional naming of children according to their birth order edit

In some of the world's cultures, birth order is so important that each child within the family is named according to the order in which the child was born. For example, in the Aboriginal Australian Barngarla language, there are nine male birth order names and nine female birth order names, as following:[31]: 42 

Male: Biri (1st), Warri (2nd), Gooni (3rd), Mooni (4th), Mari (5th), Yari (6th), Mili (7th), Wanggooyoo (8th) and Ngalai (9th).
Female: Gardanya (1st), Wayooroo (2nd), Goonda (3rd), Moonaga (4th), Maroogoo (5th), Yaranda (6th), Milaga (7th), Wanggoordoo (8th) and Ngalaga (9th).[31]: 42 

To determine the suitable name for the newborn child, one first finds out the number of the newborn within the family, and only then chooses the male/female name, according to the gender of the newborn. So, for example, if a baby girl is born after three boys, her name would be Moonaga (4th born, female) as she is the fourth child within the family.

In some modern day Western cultures, it is common for parents to give their children the same name as them. This tradition dates back to the 17th century and is most prevalent in fathers and sons, where the son will receive the same first name, middle name, and surname with either a "Jr.", "II", "III" or "IV", etc. attached after the family surname. This practice started as a symbol of status for 'upper class' citizens, but is now more commonly used as a family tradition, not necessarily implying that they are of a 'higher status' than their peer(s), sibling(s) or other family members.

The tradition of a father naming his son after himself or a male relative from an earlier generation (grandfather, great-grandfather) is referred to as 'patronymic', while the tradition of a mother naming her daughter after herself or a female relative from an earlier generation (grandmother, great-grandmother) is referred to as 'matronymic'.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Rodgers, JL; Cleveland, HH; Van Den Oord, E; Rowe, DC (2000). "Resolving the debate over birth order, family size, and intelligence". The American Psychologist. 55 (6): 599–612. doi:10.1037/0003-066X.55.6.599. PMID 10892201.
  2. ^ a b Rohrer, Julia M.; Egloff, Boris; Schmukle, Stefan C. (2015-11-17). "Examining the effects of birth order on personality". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (46): 14224–14229. Bibcode:2015PNAS..11214224R. doi:10.1073/pnas.1506451112. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 4655522. PMID 26483461.
  3. ^ Isaacson, Clifford E (2002). The Birth Order Effect: How to Better Understand Yourself and Others. Adams Media Corporation. p. 141. ISBN 978-1580625517. fourthborn.
  4. ^ Bradshaw, John (1996). The Family: A New Way of Creating Solid Self-esteem. Health Communications. pp. 36–37. ISBN 978-1558744271. fourth children.
  5. ^ Adler, A. (1964). Problems of neurosis. New York: Harper and Row.
  6. ^ a b Rohrer, Julia M.; Egloff, Boris; Schmukle, Stefan C. (2015-10-19). "Examining the effects of birth order on personality". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (46): 14224–14229. Bibcode:2015PNAS..11214224R. doi:10.1073/pnas.1506451112. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 4655522. PMID 26483461.
  7. ^ Sulloway, F.J. (2001). Birth Order, Sibling Competition, and Human Behavior. In Paul S. Davies and Harmon R. Holcomb, (Eds.), Conceptual Challenges in Evolutionary Psychology: Innovative Research Strategies. Dordrecht and Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 39-83. "Full text" (PDF). (325 KB)
  8. ^ Harris, Judith Rich (2006), No Two Alike: Human Nature and Human Individuality (pp. 107–112)
  9. ^ Rohrer, Julia M.; Egloff, Boris; Schmukle, Stefan C. (2015-11-17). "Examining the effects of birth order on personality". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (46): 14224–14229. Bibcode:2015PNAS..11214224R. doi:10.1073/pnas.1506451112. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 4655522. PMID 26483461.
  10. ^ Lamb, M. E., Sutton-Smith, B. (1982).Sibling Relationships: Their Nature and Significance of the Lifespan. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
  11. ^ a b Damian, Rodica Ioana; Roberts, Brent W. (2015-11-17). "Settling the debate on birth order and personality". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 112 (46): 14119–14120. Bibcode:2015PNAS..11214119D. doi:10.1073/pnas.1519064112. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 4655556. PMID 26518507.
  12. ^ Ernst, C. & Angst, J. (1983). Birth order: Its influence on personality. Springer.
  13. ^ Jefferson, T.; Herbst, J. H.; McCrae, R. R. (1998). "Associations between birth order and personality traits: Evidence from self-reports and observer ratings". Journal of Research in Personality. 32 (4): 498–509. doi:10.1006/jrpe.1998.2233.
  14. ^ Paulhus D.L.; Trapnell P.D.; Chen D. (1998). "Birth order effects on personality and achievement within families". Psychological Science. 10 (6): 482–488. doi:10.1111/1467-9280.00193. JSTOR 40063474. S2CID 29589929.
  15. ^ van der Leun, Justine (October 2009). . AOL Health. Archived from the original on 2010-02-06.
  16. ^ Harris, J. R. (1998). The Nurture Assumption: Why children turn out the way they do. New York: Free Press.
  17. ^ Belmont, M.; Marolla, F.A. (1973). "Birth order, family size, and intelligence". Science. 182 (4117): 1096–1101. Bibcode:1973Sci...182.1096B. doi:10.1126/science.182.4117.1096. PMID 4750607. S2CID 148641822.
  18. ^ Zajonc, R. B.; Markus, Gregory B.; Berbaum, Michael L.; Bargh, John A.; Moreland, Richard L. (1991). "One Justified Criticism Plus Three Flawed Analyses Equals Two Unwarranted Conclusions: A Reply to Retherford and Sewell". American Sociological Review. 56 (2): 159–165. doi:10.2307/2095776. ISSN 0003-1224. JSTOR 2095776.
  19. ^ Polit D. F.; Falbo T. (1988). "The intellectual achievement of only children". Journal of Biosocial Science. 20 (3): 275–285. doi:10.1017/S0021932000006611. PMID 3063715. S2CID 34618696.
  20. ^ Satoshi Kanazawa (2012). "Intelligence, Birth Order, and Family Size". Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. 38 (9): 1157–64. doi:10.1177/0146167212445911. PMID 22581677. S2CID 14512411.
  21. ^ Blanchard R (2001). "Fraternal birth order and the maternal immune hypothesis of male homosexuality". Hormones and Behavior. 40 (2): 105–114. doi:10.1006/hbeh.2001.1681. PMID 11534970. S2CID 33261960.
  22. ^ Puts, D. A.; Jordan, C. L.; Breedlove, S. M. (2006). "O brother, where art thou? The fraternal birth-order effect on male sexual orientation" (PDF). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 103 (28): 10531–10532. Bibcode:2006PNAS..10310531P. doi:10.1073/pnas.0604102103. PMC 1502267. PMID 16815969.
  23. ^ Ray Blanchard; Richard Lippa (2007). "Birth Order, Sibling Sex Ratio, Handedness, and Sexual Orientation of Male and Female Participants in a BBC Internet Research Project". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 36 (2): 163–76. doi:10.1007/s10508-006-9159-7. PMID 17345165. S2CID 18868548.
  24. ^ "BBC - Science & Nature - Sex ID - Study Results".
  25. ^ Miller EM (2000). "Homosexuality, Birth Order, and Evolution: Toward an Equilibrium Reproductive Economics of Homosexuality". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 29 (1): 1–34. doi:10.1023/A:1001836320541. PMID 10763427. S2CID 28241162.
  26. ^ Blanchard, Ray. "Review and theory of handedness, birth order, and homosexuality in men." Laterality, 2008, p. 51-70.
  27. ^ B. P. Zietsch; et al. (2012). "Do shared etiological factors contribute to the relationship between sexual orientation and depression?". Psychological Medicine. 42 (3): 521–532. doi:10.1017/S0033291711001577. PMC 3594769. PMID 21867592.
  28. ^ Mariana Kishida; Qazi Rahman (2015). "Fraternal Birth Order and Extreme Right-Handedness as Predictors of Sexual Orientation and Gender Nonconformity in Men". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 44 (5): 1493–1501. doi:10.1007/s10508-014-0474-0. PMID 25663238. S2CID 30678785.
  29. ^ Francis AM (2008). "Family and sexual orientation: the family-demographic correlates of homosexuality in men and women". J. Sex Res. 45 (4): 371–7. doi:10.1080/00224490802398357. PMID 18937128. S2CID 20471773.
  30. ^ Frisch M; Hviid A (2006). "Childhood family correlates of heterosexual and homosexual marriages: a national cohort study of two million Danes". Archives of Sexual Behavior. 35 (5): 533–47. doi:10.1007/s10508-006-9062-2. PMID 17039403. S2CID 21908113.
  31. ^ a b Zuckermann, Ghil'ad and the Barngarla (2019), Barngarlidhi Manoo (Speaking Barngarla Together), Barngarla Language Advisory Committee. (Barngarlidhi Manoo – Part II)

External links edit

  • "Development of the Firstborn Personality Scale". Self-report scale developed empirically to predict first born status. Includes open-access dataset.
  • Birth order and intelligence
  • USA Today article on CEOs
  • Investigating the effects birth order has on personality, self-esteem, satisfaction with life and age

birth, order, younger, brother, redirects, here, other, uses, younger, brother, disambiguation, middle, child, redirects, here, cole, song, middle, child, belief, that, middle, children, develop, specific, characteristics, middle, child, syndrome, refers, orde. Younger brother redirects here For other uses see Younger brother disambiguation Middle child redirects here For the J Cole song see Middle Child For the belief that middle children develop specific characteristics see Middle child syndrome Birth order refers to the order a child is born in their family first born and second born are examples Birth order is often believed to have a profound and lasting effect on psychological development This assertion has been repeatedly challenged 1 Recent research has consistently found that earlier born children score slightly higher on average on measures of intelligence but has found zero or almost zero robust effect of birth order on personality 2 Nevertheless the notion that birth order significantly influences personality continues to have a strong presence in pop psychology and popular culture 3 4 Contents 1 Theory 2 Personality 3 Intelligence 4 Sexual orientation 5 Traditional naming of children according to their birth order 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksTheory editAlfred Adler 1870 1937 an Austrian psychiatrist and a contemporary of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung was one of the first theorists to suggest that birth order influences personality He argued that birth order can leave an indelible impression on an individual s style of life which is one s habitual way of dealing with the tasks of friendship love and work According to Adler firstborns are dethroned when a second child comes along and this loss of perceived privilege and primacy may have a lasting influence on them Middle children may feel ignored or overlooked causing them to develop the so called middle child syndrome Younger and only children may be pampered and spoiled which was suggested to affect their later personalities 5 All of this assumes what Adler believed to be a typical family situation e g a nuclear family living apart from the extended family without the children being orphaned with average spacing between births without twins and other multiples and with surviving children not having severe physical intellectual or psychiatric disabilities Since Adler s time the influence of birth order on the development of personality has become a controversial issue in psychology Among the general public it is widely believed that personality is strongly influenced by birth order but many psychologists dispute this One modern theory of personality states that the Big Five personality traits of Openness Conscientiousness Extraversion Agreeableness and Neuroticism represent most of the important elements of personality that can be measured Contemporary empirical research shows that birth order does not influence the Big Five personality traits 6 In his 1996 book Born to Rebel Frank Sulloway suggested that birth order had powerful effects on the Big Five personality traits He argued that firstborns were much more conscientious and socially dominant less agreeable and less open to new ideas compared to laterborns 7 However critics such as Fred Townsend Toni Falbo and Judith Rich Harris argue against Sulloway s theories A full issue of Politics and the Life Sciences dated September 2000 but not published until 2004 8 due to legal threats from Sulloway contains carefully and rigorously researched criticisms of Sulloway s theories and data Subsequent large independent multi cohort studies have revealed approximately zero effect of birth order on personality 9 In their book Sibling Relationships Their Nature and Significance across the Lifespan Michael E Lamb and Brian Sutton Smith argue that as individuals continually adjust to competing demands of socialization agents and biological tendencies any effects of birth order may be eliminated reinforced or altered by later experiences 10 Within Investigating the effects birth order has on personality self esteem satisfaction with life and age a study presented by Sharon Johnson it is determined that first born children are presented the initial opportunity to find a personal niche in their family Due to them being the first to arrive first born children tend to form the strongest bond with their parents and will be the most likely to attempt to please them by wanting to be the most responsible sibling Middle born children tend to show a lack of attachment to their parents and the whole family unit with reports showing that middle born children are less likely to state that they felt loved during childhood Due to this lack of attachment middle born children also prove to be more self sufficient as they are also less likely to turn to a parent when they are in need Last born children show remarkable similarities to first born siblings in personality the exception being that last born children will not attempt to please their parents nearly as much as first borns Personality edit nbsp The Marx Brothers in birth order oldest at top Claims about birth order effects on personality have received much attention in scientific research with the National Academy of Sciences in the USA concluding that effects are zero 6 or near zero 11 Such research is a challenge because of the difficulty of controlling all the variables that are statistically related to birth order Family size and a number of social and demographic variables are associated with birth order and serve as potential confounds For example large families are generally lower in socioeconomic status than small families Hence third born children are not only third in birth order but they are also more likely to come from larger poorer families than firstborn children If third born children have a particular trait it may be due to birth order or it may be due to family size or to any number of other variables Consequently there are a large number of published studies on birth order that are confounded Literature reviews that have examined many studies and attempted to control for confounding variables tend to find minimal effects for birth order Ernst and Angst reviewed all of the research published between 1946 and 1980 They also did their own study on a representative sample of 6 315 young men from Switzerland They found no substantial effects of birth order and concluded that birth order research was a waste of time 12 More recent research analyzed data from a national sample of 9 664 subjects on the Big Five personality traits of extraversion neuroticism agreeableness conscientiousness and openness to experience Contrary to Sulloway s predictions they found no significant correlation between birth order and self reported personality There was however some tendency for people to perceive birth order effects when they were aware of the birth order of an individual 13 Smaller studies have partially supported Sulloway s claims Paulhus and colleagues reported that first borns scored higher on conservatism conscientiousness and achievement orientation and later borns higher on rebelliousness openness and agreeableness The authors argued that the effect emerges most clearly from studies within families Results are weak at best when individuals from different families are compared The reason is that genetic effects are stronger than birth order effects 14 Recent studies also support the claim that only children are not markedly different from their peers with siblings Scientists have found that they share many characteristics with firstborn children including being conscientious as well as parent oriented 15 In her review of the research Judith Rich Harris suggests that birth order effects may exist within the context of the family of origin but that they are not enduring aspects of personality When people are with their parents and siblings firstborns behave differently from laterborns even during adulthood However most people don t spend their adult lives in their childhood home Harris provides evidence that the patterns of behavior acquired in the childhood home don t affect the way people behave outside the home even during childhood Harris concludes that birth order effects keep turning up because people keep looking for them and keep analyzing and reanalyzing their data until they find them 16 Intelligence editSeveral studies have found that first borns have slightly higher IQ than later borns 17 2 Such data are however confounded with family size 11 which is in turn correlated with IQ confounds such as social status Robert Zajonc argued for a confluence model in which the lack of siblings experienced by first borns exposes them to the more intellectual adult family environment This predicts similar increases in IQ for siblings who next oldest sibling is at least five years senior These children are considered to be functional firstborns The theory further predicts that firstborns will be more intelligent than only children because the latter will not benefit from the tutor effect i e teaching younger siblings 18 In a metanalysis Polit and Falbo 1988 found that firstborns only children and children with one sibling all score higher on tests of verbal ability than later borns and children with multiple siblings 19 This supports the conclusion that parents who have smaller families also have children with higher IQs Resource dilution theory RDT suggests that siblings divert resources from each other The metanalysis however found no such effect Additional claims have been made for instance that siblings compete for parental affection and other resources via academic achievement balancing out confluence effects nbsp Three siblings from the 1890s The claim that firstborns have higher IQ scores has been disputed Data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth show no relationship between birth order and intelligence 1 Likewise data from the National Child Development Study in the United Kingdom has failed to support the hypothesis It states that the analyses support the admixture hypothesis which avers that the apparent birth order effect on intelligence is an artifact of family size 20 Sexual orientation editThe fraternal birth order effect is the name given to the theory that the more older brothers a man has the greater the probability is that he will have a homosexual orientation The fraternal birth order effect is said to be the strongest known predictor of sexual orientation with each older brother increasing a man s odds of being gay by approximately 33 21 22 One of the largest studies to date however suggests a smaller effect of 15 higher odds 23 24 Even so the fraternal birth order effect only accounts for a maximum of one seventh of the prevalence of homosexuality in men There seems to be no effect on sexual orientation in women and no effect of the number of older sisters In Homosexuality Birth Order and Evolution Toward an Equilibrium Reproductive Economics of Homosexuality Edward M Miller suggests that the birth order effect on homosexuality may be a by product of an evolved mechanism that shifts personality away from heterosexuality in laterborn sons 25 According to Miller this would have the consequence of reducing the probability of these sons engaging in unproductive competition with each other Evolution may have favored biological mechanisms prompting human parents to exert affirmative pressure toward heterosexual behavior in earlier born children As more children in a family survive infancy and early childhood the continued existence of the parents gene line becomes more assured cf the pressure on newly wed European aristocrats especially young brides to produce an heir and a spare and the benefits of encouraging heterosexuality weigh less strongly against the risk of psychological damage that a strongly heteronormative environment poses to a child predisposed toward homosexuality More recently this birth order effect on sexuality in males has been attributed to a very specific biological occurrence As the mother gives birth to more sons she is thought to develop an immunity to certain male specific antigens This immunity then leads to an effect in the brain that has to do with sexual preference Yet this biological effect is seen only in right handed males If not right handed the number of older brothers has been found to have no prediction on the sexuality of a younger brother This has led researchers to consider if the genes for sexuality and handedness are somehow related 26 Not all studies including some with large nationally representative samples have been able to replicate the fraternal birth order effect Some did not find any statistically significant difference in the sibling composition of gay and straight men 27 28 this includes the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health 29 the largest U S study with relevant data on the subject Furthermore at least one study on the familial correlates of joining a same sex union or marriage in a sample of two million people in Denmark found that the only sibling correlate of joining a same sex union among men was having older sisters not older brothers 30 Traditional naming of children according to their birth order editIn some of the world s cultures birth order is so important that each child within the family is named according to the order in which the child was born For example in the Aboriginal Australian Barngarla language there are nine male birth order names and nine female birth order names as following 31 42 Male Biri 1st Warri 2nd Gooni 3rd Mooni 4th Mari 5th Yari 6th Mili 7th Wanggooyoo 8th and Ngalai 9th Female Gardanya 1st Wayooroo 2nd Goonda 3rd Moonaga 4th Maroogoo 5th Yaranda 6th Milaga 7th Wanggoordoo 8th and Ngalaga 9th 31 42 To determine the suitable name for the newborn child one first finds out the number of the newborn within the family and only then chooses the male female name according to the gender of the newborn So for example if a baby girl is born after three boys her name would be Moonaga 4th born female as she is the fourth child within the family In some modern day Western cultures it is common for parents to give their children the same name as them This tradition dates back to the 17th century and is most prevalent in fathers and sons where the son will receive the same first name middle name and surname with either a Jr II III or IV etc attached after the family surname This practice started as a symbol of status for upper class citizens but is now more commonly used as a family tradition not necessarily implying that they are of a higher status than their peer s sibling s or other family members The tradition of a father naming his son after himself or a male relative from an earlier generation grandfather great grandfather is referred to as patronymic while the tradition of a mother naming her daughter after herself or a female relative from an earlier generation grandmother great grandmother is referred to as matronymic See also editAdlerian The Birth Order Book Family Firstborn Judaism Individual psychology Only child Primogeniture Sibling rivalry SladdbarnReferences edit a b Rodgers JL Cleveland HH Van Den Oord E Rowe DC 2000 Resolving the debate over birth order family size and intelligence The American Psychologist 55 6 599 612 doi 10 1037 0003 066X 55 6 599 PMID 10892201 a b Rohrer Julia M Egloff Boris Schmukle Stefan C 2015 11 17 Examining the effects of birth order on personality Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 46 14224 14229 Bibcode 2015PNAS 11214224R doi 10 1073 pnas 1506451112 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 4655522 PMID 26483461 Isaacson Clifford E 2002 The Birth Order Effect How to Better Understand Yourself and Others Adams Media Corporation p 141 ISBN 978 1580625517 fourthborn Bradshaw John 1996 The Family A New Way of Creating Solid Self esteem Health Communications pp 36 37 ISBN 978 1558744271 fourth children Adler A 1964 Problems of neurosis New York Harper and Row a b Rohrer Julia M Egloff Boris Schmukle Stefan C 2015 10 19 Examining the effects of birth order on personality Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 46 14224 14229 Bibcode 2015PNAS 11214224R doi 10 1073 pnas 1506451112 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 4655522 PMID 26483461 Sulloway F J 2001 Birth Order Sibling Competition and Human Behavior In Paul S Davies and Harmon R Holcomb Eds Conceptual Challenges in Evolutionary Psychology Innovative Research Strategies Dordrecht and Boston Kluwer Academic Publishers pp 39 83 Full text PDF 325 KB Harris Judith Rich 2006 No Two Alike Human Nature and Human Individuality pp 107 112 Rohrer Julia M Egloff Boris Schmukle Stefan C 2015 11 17 Examining the effects of birth order on personality Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 46 14224 14229 Bibcode 2015PNAS 11214224R doi 10 1073 pnas 1506451112 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 4655522 PMID 26483461 Lamb M E Sutton Smith B 1982 Sibling Relationships Their Nature and Significance of the Lifespan Lawrence Erlbaum Associates a b Damian Rodica Ioana Roberts Brent W 2015 11 17 Settling the debate on birth order and personality Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 46 14119 14120 Bibcode 2015PNAS 11214119D doi 10 1073 pnas 1519064112 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 4655556 PMID 26518507 Ernst C amp Angst J 1983 Birth order Its influence on personality Springer Jefferson T Herbst J H McCrae R R 1998 Associations between birth order and personality traits Evidence from self reports and observer ratings Journal of Research in Personality 32 4 498 509 doi 10 1006 jrpe 1998 2233 Paulhus D L Trapnell P D Chen D 1998 Birth order effects on personality and achievement within families Psychological Science 10 6 482 488 doi 10 1111 1467 9280 00193 JSTOR 40063474 S2CID 29589929 van der Leun Justine October 2009 Does Birth Order Really Matter AOL Health Archived from the original on 2010 02 06 Harris J R 1998 The Nurture Assumption Why children turn out the way they do New York Free Press Belmont M Marolla F A 1973 Birth order family size and intelligence Science 182 4117 1096 1101 Bibcode 1973Sci 182 1096B doi 10 1126 science 182 4117 1096 PMID 4750607 S2CID 148641822 Zajonc R B Markus Gregory B Berbaum Michael L Bargh John A Moreland Richard L 1991 One Justified Criticism Plus Three Flawed Analyses Equals Two Unwarranted Conclusions A Reply to Retherford and Sewell American Sociological Review 56 2 159 165 doi 10 2307 2095776 ISSN 0003 1224 JSTOR 2095776 Polit D F Falbo T 1988 The intellectual achievement of only children Journal of Biosocial Science 20 3 275 285 doi 10 1017 S0021932000006611 PMID 3063715 S2CID 34618696 Satoshi Kanazawa 2012 Intelligence Birth Order and Family Size Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 38 9 1157 64 doi 10 1177 0146167212445911 PMID 22581677 S2CID 14512411 Blanchard R 2001 Fraternal birth order and the maternal immune hypothesis of male homosexuality Hormones and Behavior 40 2 105 114 doi 10 1006 hbeh 2001 1681 PMID 11534970 S2CID 33261960 Puts D A Jordan C L Breedlove S M 2006 O brother where art thou The fraternal birth order effect on male sexual orientation PDF Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 28 10531 10532 Bibcode 2006PNAS 10310531P doi 10 1073 pnas 0604102103 PMC 1502267 PMID 16815969 Ray Blanchard Richard Lippa 2007 Birth Order Sibling Sex Ratio Handedness and Sexual Orientation of Male and Female Participants in a BBC Internet Research Project Archives of Sexual Behavior 36 2 163 76 doi 10 1007 s10508 006 9159 7 PMID 17345165 S2CID 18868548 BBC Science amp Nature Sex ID Study Results Miller EM 2000 Homosexuality Birth Order and Evolution Toward an Equilibrium Reproductive Economics of Homosexuality Archives of Sexual Behavior 29 1 1 34 doi 10 1023 A 1001836320541 PMID 10763427 S2CID 28241162 Blanchard Ray Review and theory of handedness birth order and homosexuality in men Laterality 2008 p 51 70 B P Zietsch et al 2012 Do shared etiological factors contribute to the relationship between sexual orientation and depression Psychological Medicine 42 3 521 532 doi 10 1017 S0033291711001577 PMC 3594769 PMID 21867592 Mariana Kishida Qazi Rahman 2015 Fraternal Birth Order and Extreme Right Handedness as Predictors of Sexual Orientation and Gender Nonconformity in Men Archives of Sexual Behavior 44 5 1493 1501 doi 10 1007 s10508 014 0474 0 PMID 25663238 S2CID 30678785 Francis AM 2008 Family and sexual orientation the family demographic correlates of homosexuality in men and women J Sex Res 45 4 371 7 doi 10 1080 00224490802398357 PMID 18937128 S2CID 20471773 Frisch M Hviid A 2006 Childhood family correlates of heterosexual and homosexual marriages a national cohort study of two million Danes Archives of Sexual Behavior 35 5 533 47 doi 10 1007 s10508 006 9062 2 PMID 17039403 S2CID 21908113 a b Zuckermann Ghil ad and the Barngarla 2019 Barngarlidhi Manoo Speaking Barngarla Together Barngarla Language Advisory Committee Barngarlidhi Manoo Part II External links edit Development of the Firstborn Personality Scale Self report scale developed empirically to predict first born status Includes open access dataset Birth order and intelligence The Independent article USA Today article on CEOs Investigating the effects birth order has on personality self esteem satisfaction with life and age Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Birth order amp oldid 1222183375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.