Likely Electromagnetic Foundations of Gender Inequality
Cross-Cultural Research • Vol/Iss. 57(2-3) • Sage Journals • • Published In • Pages: 239-263 •
By León, Federico R.
Hypothesis
Higher UV radiation is associated with more gender inequality.
Note
When models were tested, it was found that the model that best fit the data showed that UV radiation, the presence of the ACP1*B allele, pathogen prevalence, and cognitive performance all predicted the presence of gender inequality. For more details, see page 250.
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Regression analysis, Mediation modeling | Support Claimed | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN | UNKNOWN |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Gender Inequality | Dependent | Gender Roles And Issues, Gender Status |
Pathogen Prevalence | Dependent/Independent | Morbidity |
UV radiation | Independent | Climate |
ACP1*B allele presence | Dependent/Independent | Genetics |
Cognitive performance | Dependent/Independent | Modification Of Behavior |