(Press-News.org) DURHAM, N.C. -- In the U.S., couples with daughters are somewhat more likely to divorce than couples with sons. Many scholars have read those numbers as evidence that daughters cause divorce.
But new research from Duke University suggests something quite different may be at play: Girls may be hardier than boys, even in the womb, and may be better able to survive pregnancies stressed by a troubled marriage.
Previous studies have argued that fathers prefer boys and are more likely to stay in marriages that produce sons. Conversely, the argument runs, men are more likely to leave a marriage that produces daughters. That scholarly claim has been around for decades, and has gained a following in popular culture.
"Many have suggested that girls have a negative effect on the stability of their parents' union," said Duke economist Amar Hamoudi, who co-authored the new study with Jenna Nobles, a University of Wisconsin-Madison sociologist. "We are saying: 'Not so fast.' "
Their study appears online July 15 in the journal Demography.
Hamoudi, who teaches in Duke's Sanford School of Public Policy and is a fellow of the Duke Center for Child and Family Policy, points to a very different potential explanation for differing divorce rates: the robustness of female embryos.
Throughout the life course, girls and women are generally hardier than boys and men. At every age from birth to age 100, boys and men die in greater proportions than girls and women. Epidemiological evidence also suggests that the female survival advantage actually begins in utero. These more robust female embryos may be better able to withstand stresses to pregnancy, the new paper argues, including stresses caused by relationship conflict.
Based on an analysis of longitudinal data from a nationally representative sample of U.S. residents from 1979 to 2010, Hamoudi and Nobles say a couple's level of relationship conflict predicts their likelihood of subsequent divorce.
Strikingly, the authors also found that a couple's level of relationship conflict at a given time also predicted the sex of children born to that couple at later points in time. Women who reported higher levels of marital conflict were more likely in subsequent years to give birth to girls, rather than boys.
"Girls may well be surviving stressful pregnancies that boys can't survive," Hamoudi said. "Thus girls are more likely than boys to be born into marriages that were already strained."
Hamoudi and Nobles also make a broader point that reaches beyond the issue of divorce. Population studies typically begin at birth, Hamoudi said. Yet if demographers and other social scientists want to fully understand how family dynamics affect populations, they need to consider the months before birth as well.
"It's time for population studies to shine a light on the period of pregnancy," Hamoudi said. "The clock does not start at birth."
INFORMATION:
The research was financially supported in part by the Center for Demography of Health and Aging at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Citation "Do Daughters Really Cause Divorce: Stress, Pregnancy and Family Composition," Amar Hamoudi and Jenna Nobles. Demography, July 15, 2014, DOI: 10.1007/s13524-014-0305-x
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13524-014-0305-x
Do daughters really cause divorce? Maybe not
Surprising suggestion for why divorce is more common among families with girls
2014-07-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Gene discovery could lead to better soybean varieties for Northern United States
2014-07-15
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Researchers from Purdue University and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln have discovered a soybean gene whose mutation affects plant stem growth, a finding that could lead to the development of improved soybean cultivars for the northern United States.
Purdue agronomy professor Jianxin Ma (pronounced Jen-SHIN' Ma) and collaborators identified a gene known as Dt2, which causes semideterminacy in soybean plants. Semideterminate soybean plants - mid-size plants that continue vegetative growth even after flowering - can produce as many or more pods ...
Transparency lacking in clinical trials, BU study finds
2014-07-15
A significant percentage of completed drug clinical trials, especially those funded by industry, are not disclosed to the public, years after being completed—a trend that "threatens the validity of the clinical research literature in the U.S.," according to a study led by a Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) researcher.
The study, published in the journal PLOS ONE, found that close to 30 percent of 400 randomly selected clinical trials completed in 2008 had not resulted, four years later, in either publication in a journal or the posting of results to the ...
Do women talk more than men? It's all about context
2014-07-15
We've all heard the stereotype: Women like to talk. We bounce ideas off each other about everything from career moves to dinner plans. We hash out big decisions through our conversations with one another and work through our emotions with discussion.
At least, that's what "they" say. But is any of it actually true? A new study from Northeastern University professor David Lazer's lab says it isn't that simple.
Lazer, who researches social networks and holds joint appointments in the Department of Political Science and the College of Computer and Information Sciences, ...
NASA's Van Allen Probes show how to accelerate electrons
2014-07-15
One of the great, unanswered questions for space weather scientists is just what creates two gigantic donuts of radiation surrounding Earth, called the Van Allen radiation belts. Recent data from the Van Allen Probes -- two nearly identical spacecraft that launched in 2012 -- address this question.
The inner Van Allen radiation belt is fairly stable, but the outer one changes shape, size and composition in ways that scientists don't yet perfectly understand. Some of the particles within this belt zoom along at close to light speed, but just what accelerates these particles ...
NOAA's GOES-R satellite Magnetometer ready for spacecraft integration
2014-07-15
The Magnetometer instrument that will fly on NOAA's GOES-R satellite when it is launched in early 2016 has completed the development and testing phase and is ready to be integrated with the spacecraft.
The Magnetometer will monitor magnetic field variations around the Earth and enable forecasters at NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center to better predict the consequences of geomagnetic storms. These storms pose a threat to orbiting spacecraft and human spaceflight. In addition, the measurements taken by the Magnetometer will aid in providing alerts and warnings to power ...
For bees and flowers, tongue size matters
2014-07-15
For bees and the flowers they pollinate, a compatible tongue length is essential to a successful relationship. Some bees and plants are very closely matched, with bee tongue sized to the flower depth. Other bee species are generalists, flitting among flower species to drink nectar and collect pollen from a diverse variety of plants. Data on tongue lengths can help ecologists understand and predict the behavior, resilience and invasiveness of bee populations.
But bee tongues are hard to measure. The scarcity of reliable lingual datasets has held back research, so Ignasi ...
Study finds why some firms are 'named and shamed' by activists
2014-07-15
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new study of the anti-sweatshop campaigns of the 1990s reveals which companies are most likely to become targets of anti-corporate activists.
Researchers found that companies tended to attract the attention of labor activists if they were large, had prominent brand images, or had good corporate reputations. When combined, these factors were especially important.
"Companies that had all of these characteristics were nearly guaranteed to be a target of activism," said Tim Bartley, lead author of the study and associate professor of sociology at The ...
Fundamental chemistry findings could help extend Moore's Law
2014-07-15
Over the years, computer chips have gotten smaller thanks to advances in materials science and manufacturing technologies. This march of progress, the doubling of transistors on a microprocessor roughly every two years, is called Moore's Law. But there's one component of the chip-making process in need of an overhaul if Moore's law is to continue: the chemical mixture called photoresist. Similar to film used in photography, photoresist, also just called resist, is used to lay down the patterns of ever-shrinking lines and features on a chip.
Now, in a bid to continue decreasing ...
Study: Body Dysmorphic Disorder patients have higher risk of personal and appearance-based rejection sensitivity
2014-07-15
PROVIDENCE, R.I. – In a recent study, researchers at Rhode Island Hospital found that fear of being rejected because of one's appearance, as well as rejection sensitivity to general interpersonal situations, were significantly elevated in individuals with Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD). These fears, referred to as personal rejection sensitivity and appearance-based rejection sensitivity, can lead to diminished quality of life and poorer mental and overall health. BDD is a common, often severe, and under-recognized body image disorder that affects an estimated 1.7 to 2.4 ...
Prostate cancer in young men -- More frequent and more aggressive?
2014-07-15
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- The number of younger men diagnosed with prostate cancer has increased nearly 6-fold in the last 20 years, and the disease is more likely to be aggressive in these younger men, according to a new analysis from researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Typically, prostate cancer occurs more frequently as men age into their 70s or 80s. Many prostate cancers are slow-growing and many older men diagnosed with early stage prostate cancer will end up dying from causes other than prostate cancer.
But, the researchers found, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
The Lancet: Climate change inaction being paid for in millions of lives every year
New insights reveal how coral gets a grip
Home treatment with IV antibiotics could relieve NHS pressure
AI ECG better detects severe heart attacks in emergency setting
Straw-based biochar and smart irrigation help maize thrive with less water and fertilizer
‘Broken’ genes a common factor in marsupial fur colour
Turning waste into clean water: Magnetic carbon materials remove toxic pollutants from wastewater
World Health Organization’s priorities shaped by its reliance on grants from donor organisations such as the Gates Foundation
One in ten people without coeliac disease or wheat allergy report sensitivity to gluten or wheat
How can (A)I help you?
Study finds new system can cut patient waiting times for discharge
Allison Institute’s third annual scientific symposium highlighted by panel discussion with five Nobel laureates
SETI Institute accelerates the search for life beyond earth with NVIDIA IGX Thor
Wetlands efficiently remove nitrogen pollution from surface water, leading to cost savings for municipalities
Dr. Loren Miller presents oral late breaker at IDWeek 2025 of a first-of-its-kind clinical trial that shows efficacy of bacteriophage therapy for Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia
Dirty water boosts prospects for clean hydrogen
New multisociety guidance strengthens infection prevention and control in nursing homes
More scientific analysis needed on impacts of industrial decarbonization
New research uncovers how bad bacteria know where to cluster and cause infection
As ochre sea star ‘baby boomers’ grow up, species showing signs of recovery
Six-million-year-old ice discovered in Antarctica offers unprecedented window into a warmer Earth
When it comes to mating, female mosquitoes call the shots
CZI and NVIDIA accelerate virtual cell model development for scientific discovery
JMIR Publications and MCBIOS partner to boost open access bioinformatics research
Canadian scientists describe an extinct rhino species from Canada's High Arctic
Houseplant inspires textured surfaces to mitigate copper IUD corrosion
LIGO, Virgo and KAGRA observed “second generation” black holes
Dicer: Life's ancient repair tool
Environmental shifts are pushing endangered reptiles to the brink of extinction
New open-source American College of Lifestyle Medicine program brings culinary skills and nutrition education into medicine
[Press-News.org] Do daughters really cause divorce? Maybe notSurprising suggestion for why divorce is more common among families with girls





