posted on 2023-07-21, 06:00authored byG Richards, DW Tan, AJO Whitehouse, I Chris McManus, AA Beaton, M Hickey, MT Maybery, MK Licari, Lauren LawsonLauren Lawson
The developmental origins of handedness remain elusive, though very early emergence suggests individual differences manifesting in utero could play an important role. Prenatal testosterone and Vitamin D exposure are considered, yet findings and interpretations remain equivocal. We examined n = 767 offspring from a population-based pregnancy cohort (The Raine Study) for whom early biological data and childhood/adolescent handedness data were available. We tested whether 18-week maternal circulatory Vitamin D (25[OH]D), and testosterone and estradiol from umbilical cord blood sampled at birth predicted variance in direction of hand preference (right/left), along with right- and left-hand speed, and the strength and direction of relative hand skill as measured by a finger-tapping task completed at 10 (Y10) and/or 16 (Y16) years. Although higher concentrations of Vitamin D predicted more leftward and less lateralized (regardless of direction) relative hand skill profiles, taken as a whole, statistically significant findings typically did not replicate across time-point (Y10/Y16) or sex (male/female) and were rarely detected across different (bivariate/multivariate) levels of analysis. Considering the number of statistical tests and generally inconsistent findings, our results suggest that perinatal testosterone and estradiol contribute minimally, if at all, to subsequent variance in handedness. Vitamin D, however, may be of interest in future studies.
Funding
Our access to data from The Raine Study was made possible by a British Academy/Leverhulme Trust Small Research Grant (SRG1819\190620) awarded to Gareth Richards, and was approved under the project “Foetal testosterone, maternal gestational vitamin D levels, and offspring hand preference” (reference number PER0381). Diana Tan was supported by a BrightSpark Research Collaboration Award from the Raine Medical Research Foundation (BRCA01-19), and research funding providing by the Faculty of Science in the University of Western Australia allocated to Murray Maybery. Lauren Lawson’s position was supported by the Cooperative Research Centre for Living with Autism (Autism CRC), which is established and supported under the Australian Government’s Cooperative Research Centres Program. Andrew Whitehouse is supported by an Investigator Grant from the National Health and Medical Research Council (1173896).