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Why Do Grandparents Prefer Certain Grandchildren?
Study explores relationships with grandchildren
June10, 2004 - Grandparents systemically prefer
some grandchildren to others because of doubts about genetic lineage new
research confirms.
Not all grandparents invest the same time and
resources in their grandchildren, says UNSW psychologist and study
co-author, Dr Bill von Hippel.
Maternal grandmothers are closer to their
grandchildren than other grandparents. The next closest relationship
between grandparents and grandchildren is by maternal grandfathers, then
paternal grandmothers and, last of all, paternal grandfathers.
To be published in Personality & Social Psychology,
the study is the first to confirm that preferential investment stems
from genetic uncertainty. The finding is based on data from 780
university students who rated their emotional closeness to each
biological grandparent from zero (cold or negative feelings) to 100
(warm or positive feelings).
Not all grandparents are certain that their
grandchildren are their own, says von Hippel. A woman always knows she
is the mother of her child but a man has a some uncertainty about his
paternity because he might have been cuckolded, he says.
This issue is compounded for grandparents. A
maternal grandmother knows with certainty that her genetic material has
passed to her grandchildren through her daughter but a paternal
grandfather has double uncertainty -- he has no certainty that either
his son or his grandchildren bear his genetic material.
Maternal grandmothers and paternal grandfathers
represent two extremes of this genetic uncertainty spectrum says von
Hippel.
Logic suggests these two grandparents share one
uncertain genetic link with their grandchildren and should therefore
invest the same time and resources in them. Our research confirms that
grandchildren feel emotionally closer to their maternal grandfather than
their paternal grandmother.
However, this finding is only true when a paternal
grandmother has other grandchildren available to her through her
daughter(s), and thereby has genetically more certain grandchildren to
invest in rather than her sons children.
When paternal grandmothers have grandchildren only
through their son, their degree of closeness is equal to maternal
grandfathers.
Von Hippels work is a test of the evolutionary
explanation for preferential investment.
Until now, work on grandparent-grandchild
relations has ignored the influence that other grandchildren have on
grandparental investment. Grandparents must spread their time and
resources across grandchildren, and genetic certainty clearly influences
this.
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