Titel på undersøgelse:

Sex Differences in Response to Children’s Toys in Nonhuman Primates (Cercopithecus aethiops sabaeus).

Forfattere: Alexander, Gerianne M., and Melissa Hines. | År: 2002 | Kapitel:

Et studie med aber viste, at de havde de samme kønsbaserede præferencer for legetøj som børn. Hanner foretrak biler og bolde, mens hunner foretrak dukker og gryder. Dette tyder på, at biologiske faktorer spiller en rolle i kønsforskelle i legetøjsvalg og at disse præferencer stammer fra evolutionære forskelle i adfærd.

Hele abstrakt på originalsprog:

Sex differences in children’s toy preferences are thought by many to arise from gender socialization. However, evidence from patients with endocrine disorders suggests that biological factors during early development (e.g., levels of androgens) are influential. In this study, we found that vervet monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops sabaeus) show sex differences in toy preferences similar to those documented previously in children. The percent of contact time with toys typically preferred by boys (a car and a ball) was greater in male vervets (n = 33) than in female vervets (n = 30) (P < .05), whereas the percent of contact time with toys typically preferred by girls (a doll and a pot) was greater in female vervets than in male vervets (P < .01). In contrast, contact time with toys preferred equally by boys and girls (a picture book and a stuffed dog) was comparable in male and female vervets. The results suggest that sexually differentiated object preferences arose early in human evolution, prior to the emergence of a distinct hominid lineage. This implies that sexually dimorphic preferences for features (e.g., color, shape, movement) may have evolved from differential selection pressures based on the different behavioral roles of males and females, and that evolved object feature preferences may contribute to present day sexually dimorphic toy preferences in children.