Study Links Finger Length, SAT Performance

<p>Here’s an interesting article:</p>

<p>A quick look at the lengths of children’s index and ring fingers can be used to predict how well students will perform on SATs, new research claims. </p>

<p>Kids with longer ring fingers compared to index fingers are likely to have higher math scores than literacy or verbal scores on the college entrance exam, while children with the reverse finger-length ratio are likely to have higher reading and writing, or verbal, scores versus math scores. </p>

<p>Scientists have known that different levels of the hormones testosterone and estrogen in the womb account for the different finger lengths, which are a reflection of areas of the brain that are more highly developed than others, said psychologist Mark Brosnan of the University of Bath, who led the study. </p>

<p>Exposure to testosterone in the womb is said to promote development of areas of the brain often associated with spatial and mathematical skills, he said. That hormone makes the ring finger longer. Estrogen exposure does the same for areas of the brain associated with verbal ability and tends to lengthen the index finger relative to the ring finger. </p>

<p>To test the link to children’s scores on the College Board’s Scholastic Assessment Test (for which the name has changed a number of times in the past 100 years), Brosnan and his colleagues made photocopies of children’s palms and measured the length of their index and ring fingers using calipers accurate to 0.01 millimeters. They used the finger-length ratios as a proxy for the levels of testosterone and estrogen exposure. </p>

<p>The researchers then looked at boys’ and girls’ test performances separately and compared them to finger-length ratio measurements. They found a clear link between high prenatal testosterone exposure, indicated by the longer ring finger compared to the index finger, and higher scores on the math SAT. </p>

<p>Similarly, they found higher literacy SAT scores for the girls among those who had lower prenatal testosterone exposure, as indicated by a shorter ring finger compared with the index finger. </p>

<p>The researchers also compared the finger-lengths ratios to all the children’s SAT scores and found that a relatively longer ring finger-indicating greater prenatal exposure to testosterone-meant a wider gap in scores for math versus literacy (writing and critical reading). </p>

<p>“Finger ratio provides us with an interesting insight into our innate abilities in key cognitive areas,” Brosnan said, in a prepared statement. The results will be detailed in an upcoming issue of the British Journal of Psychology. </p>

<p>In the future, his team will see if finger-length ratios are related to other cognitive and behavioral issues, such as technophobia, career paths and possibly dyslexia. </p>

<p>Source:</p>

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<p>The secret to the SAT may literally be right at your fingertips. It seems to be true for me. I have a longer ring finger than index finger and Math was my best section.</p>

<p>Well, I must be an anomaly. Math is my worse subject, and I majored and did well in areas that required significant verbal and reading skills. My ring finger is way longer than my index finger. Very interesting premise, though.</p>

<p>I flip-flopped my ACT/SAT scores eons ago. What do you do with equal- 800 -scores (son’s, not mine)?</p>

<p>If I had only known that when I took the SAT in 1966, perhaps I would have scored higher on math – as it was, my verbal score was over a hundred points higher, despite my noticeably longer ring finger!</p>

<p>I saw this article – it’s absolutely true for my son! But, what if your index finger and ring fingers are the same length? Does that mean I’m an all-around genius??? :)</p>

<p>I have a question. Given the results of this study, do you think it’s possible for one to take hormones in order to affect his/her SAT score? For example, if a male has like a 750 on Math, but can’t even break 600 on Reading, could he theoretically increase his reading ability by taking estrogen supplements? How about a female taking testosterone to boost Math scores? It would be another interesting study, although I think it would be a bit unethical messing with people’s homone balances.</p>

<p>This article also reminds me of something that a student at my school was saying. He said that guys w/longer index fingers than ring fingers are more likely to be homosexual. I thought it was some sort of joke, but this study seems to make what he said at least plausible. A longer index finger means higher estorgen levels, and higher estrogen is the feminine hormone.</p>

<p>Hepstar – had to laugh about the “messing with hormone balances being unethical.” Honestly, women are being “messed with” most of their lives! Our hormones are all over the place, depending on what stage of life we’re at.</p>

<p>I posted elsewhere --but don’t have the time right now to cross link – but this whole thing is garbage because finger length is GENETIC – it is influenced by hormones, but primarily your finger length/ratio is a matter of the genes inherited by parents. It’s a matter of interplay between dominant/recessive genes that are expressed somewhat differently depending on hormonal levels during development. Because it is genetic, finger ratios vary considerably by geography – with northern Europeans tending to have much shorter ring fingers than, say, Africans. There is no way that they can conclude that differences in performance are hormonally related, vs. a product of genetics, without controlling for the genetic factor: i.e., measuring the finger ratios of parents and obtaining info about parental performance on similar tests. </p>

<p>As I posted before, I am blessed with long tapering fingers with the ring finger clearly longer than index finger – a trait that was clearly inherited from my mom and her relatives, and which is shared by my brother and my offspring. My son is good in math, my daughter isn’t. Everyone always comments on our hands. </p>

<p>(You can find the links to the references I cited about genetics by either searching my other posts on the topic or going to the wikipedia article on digit ratio and also googling, “digit ratio genetic” or something similar)</p>

<p>What if a guy’s index finger is longer than his ring finger?</p>

<p>Hepstar, brain development is linked to hormone exposure in the womb. By the time you’re old enough for the SAT, hormone supplements wouldn’t have that much impact on your brain.</p>

<p>[url=<a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/htmlContent.jhtml?html=/archive/2000/03/30/wdigit30.html]Here’s[/url"&gt;http://www.telegraph.co.uk/htmlContent.jhtml?html=/archive/2000/03/30/wdigit30.html]Here’s[/url&lt;/a&gt;] an interesting article about finger length and homosexuality, though.</p>