Hostname: page-component-76dd75c94c-h9cmj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T07:31:01.262Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Twin data on hand clasping: a reanalysis1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2014

Ademar Freire-Maia*
Affiliation:
Laboratório de Genética Humana, Faculdade de Filosofia, Universidade do Paraná, Brasil

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Individuals can be classified into two categories, according to the way of per forming hand clasping: R type, when the fingers of the right hand occupies the uppermost position (sec fig. in Rothschild, 1930), and L type, when the opposite situation occurs (see fig. in Winchester, 1958). Each person has his peculiar way of clasping his hands, and it is believed that the type persists unchanged throughout the whole life. The reason why some persons clasp the hands with the fingers occupying one position, and not the other, is as yet unknown. This fact cannot be explained by relatively large differences in the shape and proportions of the bones of the hand, since it has been shown that a close over-all similarity between them exists (Greulich, 1960). We suggest, however, that even the small differences detected can explain the situation.

Dahlberg (1926), based on twin and populational data, concluded that “there is hardly reason to presume heredity” in the genesis of the trait. His data can be explained well on the basis of a chance distribution, but this hypothesis can not account for the extensive amount of family data (Lutz, 1908; Yamaura, 1940; Kawabe, 1949; Yoshiwara, 1957; and Freire-Maia, Quelce-Salgado and Freire-Maia, 1958), as well as for the large amount of populational data (see Freire-Maia et al. 1958; Yoshiwara, 1957 ; Freire-Maia, 1961), and the ethnic, sex, and age differences detected (see Freire-Maia et al. 1958). Although all those authors presented strong evidences of a genetic component on the genesis of the trait, no simple Mendelian mechanism could explain the data, however.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The International Society for Twin Studies 1961

Footnotes

1

This work has been supported by grants from the National Research Council of Brazil and the Research Council of the University of Paraná.

References

Dahlberg, G.: 1926. Twin births and twins from a hereditary point of view. Bokförlags-A.-B. Tidens Tryckeri, Stockholm, 296 pp.Google Scholar
Freire-Maia, A.: 1961. Age effect on hand clasping and arm folding (to be publ.).Google Scholar
Freire-Maia, N., Quelce-Salgado, A. and Freire-Maia, A.: 1958. Hand clasping in different ethnic groups. Hum. Biol., 30 (4): 281291.Google ScholarPubMed
Greulich, W. W.: 1960. Value of X-ray Films of Hand and Wrist in Human Identification. Science, 131 (3394): 155156.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kawabe, M.: 1949. A study on the mode of clasping the hands. Trans. Sapporo Nat. Hist. Soc., 18: 4952.Google Scholar
Lutz, F. E.: 1908. The inheritance of the manner of clasping the hands. Am. Nat., 42: 195196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merrell, D. J.: 1957. Dominance of eye and hand. Hum. Biol., 29 (4): 314328.Google ScholarPubMed
Rife, D. G.: 1950. An application of gene frequency analysis to the interpretation of data from twins. Hum. Biol., 22 (2): 136145.Google Scholar
Rothschild, F. S.: 1930. Über Links und Rechts. Eine erscheinungswissenschaftliche Untersuchung. Zeitschr. f. die gesamte Neur. u. Psych., 124: 451511.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yamaura, A.: 1940. On some hereditary characters in the Japanese race including the Tyosenese (Coreans). Jap. Journ. Genetics, 16: 19.Google Scholar
Yoshiwara, Y.: 1957. On the inheritance of the manner of clasping hand. Jap. Journ. Hum. Genet., 2 (2): 7374 Google Scholar
Winchester, A. M.: 1958. Genetics. Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston, 2nd. ed., 414 pp.Google Scholar