[PDF] Beautiful British Parents Have More Daughters | Semantic Scholar Skip to search formSkip to main content> Semantic Scholar's Logo Search Sign InCreate Free Account You are currently offline. Some features of the site may not work correctly. DOI:10.1177/1933719110393031 Corpus ID: 2853172Beautiful British Parents Have More Daughters @article{Kanazawa2011BeautifulBP, title={Beautiful British Parents Have More Daughters}, author={S. Kanazawa}, journal={Reproductive Sciences}, year={2011}, volume={18}, pages={353 - 358} } S. Kanazawa Published 2011 Biology, Medicine Reproductive Sciences The generalized Trivers-Willard hypothesis proposes that parents who possess any heritable trait that increases male reproductive success at a greater rate than female reproductive success in a given environment will have a higher-than-expected offspring sex ratio (more sons), and parents who possess any heritable trait that increases female reproductive success at a greater rate than male reproductive success in a given environment will have a lower-than-expected offspring sex ratio (more… Expand View on Springer personal.lse.ac.uk Save to Library Create Alert Cite Launch Research Feed Share This Paper 4 CitationsBackground Citations 2 Methods Citations 1 View All Tables and Topics from this paper table 1 Reproduction Sex Ratio Paper Mentions Blog Post Kanazawa [updated] Offsetting Behaviour 6 June 2011 4 Citations Citation Type Citation Type All Types Cites Results Cites Methods Cites Background Has PDF Publication Type Author More Filters More Filters Filters Sort by Relevance Sort by Most Influenced Papers Sort by Citation Count Sort by Recency Effects of Mother and Father Dominance on Offspring Sex in Contemporary Humans Jaime L Palmer-Hague, N. Watson Psychology 2016 1 PDF Save Alert Research Feed An association between women's physical attractiveness and the length of their reproductive career in a prospectively longitudinal nationally representative sample S. Kanazawa Psychology, Medicine American journal of human biology : the official journal of the Human Biology Council 2019 1 PDF View 1 excerpt, cites methods Save Alert Research Feed Is there a viability-vulnerability tradeoff? Sex differences in fetal programming. C. Sandman, L. Glynn, E. Davis Psychology, Medicine Journal of psychosomatic research 2013 190 PDF View 1 excerpt, cites background Save Alert Research Feed Spatial-temporal analysis of endocrine disruptor pollution, neighbourhood stress, maternal age and related factors as potential determinants of birth sex ratio in Scotland Ewan W. McDonald Medicine 2013 1 PDF View 1 excerpt, cites background Save Alert Research Feed References SHOWING 1-10 OF 53 REFERENCES SORT BYRelevance Most Influenced Papers Recency Beautiful parents have more daughters: a further implication of the generalized Trivers-Willard hypothesis (gTWH). S. Kanazawa Psychology, Medicine Journal of theoretical biology 2007 45 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Big and tall parents have more sons: further generalizations of the Trivers-Willard hypothesis. S. Kanazawa Biology, Medicine Journal of theoretical biology 2005 57 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Violent men have more sons: further evidence for the generalized Trivers-Willard hypothesis (gTWH). S. Kanazawa Psychology, Medicine Journal of theoretical biology 2006 26 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Sociosexually unrestricted parents have more sons: A further application of the generalized Trivers–Willard hypothesis (gTWH) S. Kanazawa, Péter Apari Psychology, Medicine Annals of human biology 2009 11 PDF Save Alert Research Feed A Trivers-Willard Effect in Contemporary Humans: Male-Biased Sex Ratios among Billionaires E. Cameron, F. Dalerum Biology, Medicine PloS one 2009 69 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Waiting for Trivers and Willard: do the rich really favor sons? S. Koziel, S. J. Ulijaszek Sociology, Medicine American journal of physical anthropology 2001 64 Save Alert Research Feed Why Beautiful People Are More Intelligent. S. Kanazawa, Jody L. Kovar Psychology 2004 134 PDF Save Alert Research Feed The Trivers–Willard hypothesis of parental investment: No effect in the contemporary United States M. Keller, R. Nesse, S. Hofferth Psychology 2001 114 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Presidents Preferred Sons L. Betzig, Samantha Weber Sociology 1995 34 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Trivers-Willard effect in contemporary North American society. S. Gaulin, C. J. Robbins Psychology, Medicine American journal of physical anthropology 1991 130 Save Alert Research Feed ... 1 2 3 4 5 ... Related Papers Abstract Tables and Topics Paper Mentions 4 Citations 53 References Related Papers Stay Connected With Semantic Scholar Sign Up About Semantic Scholar Semantic Scholar is a free, AI-powered research tool for scientific literature, based at the Allen Institute for AI. Learn More → Resources DatasetsSupp.aiAPIOpen Corpus Organization About UsResearchPublishing PartnersData Partners   FAQContact Proudly built by AI2 with the help of our Collaborators Blog posts, news articles and tweet counts and IDs sourced by Altmetric.com Terms of Service•Privacy Policy The Allen Institute for AI By clicking accept or continuing to use the site, you agree to the terms outlined in our Privacy Policy, Terms of Service, and Dataset License ACCEPT & CONTINUE