Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · Jul 17
Study of 225 Newborns Links Prenatal Estrogen to Larger Male Head Size
Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · Jul 17

Study of 225 Newborns Links Prenatal Estrogen to Larger Male Head Size

2 articles · Updated · ScienceDaily · Jul 17

Summary

  • Researchers measuring 225 newborns found boys with higher 2D:4D finger ratios—a marker of greater prenatal estrogen exposure—tended to have larger head circumferences, a common proxy for brain size.
  • The association appeared in 100 boys but not in 125 girls, suggesting the hormone-linked effect on neonatal head size may be sex-specific.
  • Head circumference is widely used to gauge newborn brain size and has been tied to later cognitive measures, though the study reports correlation rather than proof that finger length or hormones directly determine brain growth.
  • The findings, published in Early Human Development, lend support to the “estrogenized ape” hypothesis that rising prenatal estrogen helped drive human brain expansion despite possible male trade-offs such as cardiovascular, fertility and schizophrenia risks.

Insights

Why would prenatal estrogen, a key to bigger brains, only show its effect in newborn boys and not girls?
Did a hormonal trade-off for bigger brains also make human males more vulnerable to certain modern diseases?
If hormones fueled our intelligence, what explains the long evolutionary periods where our brains did not get any bigger?