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Effects of physical appearance on masculine
trait ratings of boys and girls with gender identity disorder.
McDermid SA, Zucker KJ, Bradley SJ,
Maing DM.
Child and Adolescent Gender Identity Clinic,
Child and Family Studies Centre, Clarke Institute of Psychiatry, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada.
Abstract [Full Text] [PDF]
Abstract
University students, masked to group status,
rated the physical appearance of boys and girls with gender identity disorder
(GID) and same-sex controls using traits with stereotypical masculine
connotations (for boys: all-boy, handsome, masculine, and rugged; for girls:
handsome, masculine, rugged, and tomboyish).
Three traits (all-boy, masculine, and rugged)
were judged to be significantly less characteristic of the boys with GID as
compared to the same-sex controls; for the fourth trait (handsome), the
inverse result was obtained.
All four traits (handsome, masculine, rugged,
and tomboyish) were judged to be significantly more characteristic of the
girls with GID as compared to the same-sex normal and/or clinical controls.
These results were the inverse of the results obtained in two previous
experiments, in which traits with stereotypical feminine connotations were
used (Fridell et al., 1996; Zucker et al., 1993).
Taken together, the results suggest that boys
and girls with GID have a sex-typed physical appearance that distinguishes
them from same-sex controls. Possible determinants of these differences are
discussed.
Citation:
Arch Sex Behav 1998 Jun;27(3):253-67 an article
published on the Internet by PubMed <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/>
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