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Androgyny in Schizophrenics and their Relatives

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

F. D. Kelsey*
Affiliation:
Claybury Hospital, Woodford Bridge, Woodford Green, Essex, and Chase Farm Hospital, Enfield, Middlesex

Extract

Androgyny is an expression of relative masculinity and femininity in body-build. Tanner (1962) states “Androgyny can be perhaps best measured by means of scales constructed so as to give the best discrimination between men and women, and the simplest of such scales measures a masculinity score as 3 Biacromial—1 Bi-iliac diameter. This score gives men a mean of around ninety-three units with a standard deviation of about five, and women a mean of about seventy-eight with a similar standard deviation”.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1965 

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References

Board of Trade (1957). Women's Measurements and Sizes. London.Google Scholar
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Coppen, A. J. and Rey, J. H. (1959). “Distribution of androgyny in mental patients.” Brit. med. J., 2, 14451447.Google Scholar
Tanner, J. M. (1951). “Current advances in the study of physique.” Lancet, i, 574579.Google Scholar
Tanner, J. M. (1962). Growth at Adolescence. Oxford.Google Scholar
Tanner, J. M. and Whitehouse, R. H. (1957). “The Harpenden Anthropometer.” Amer. J. phys. Anthropol., 15 N.S., 2, 277280.Google Scholar
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