Social contact versus bodily contact: a qualitative difference between father and mother for the son's masculine identity
Behavior Science Research • Vol/Iss. 13 • Published In • Pages: 273-285 •
By Kitahara, Michio
Hypothesis
Male circumcision becomes more likely when mothers and babies share beds and when fathers sleep in separate huts/villages. Societies with both traits, one trait, and neither trait will be most, less, and least likely to have circumcision, respectively (281-2).
Note
Author compares this p-value, which indicates a significant difference in circumcision between societies with both and neither traits, to other p-values to support hypothesis. He makes distinctions between p-values which are both below .05; this is not a conventional method of comparison.
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fisher’s exact test | Claimed supported | p<.001 | UNKNOWN | One-tailed |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Circumcision | Dependent | Body Alterations |
Parent-child Sleeping Arrangements | Independent | Sleeping, Infant Care |