Tongue rolling
Tongue rolling is the ability to roll the lateral edges of the
Genetics
Prevalence in human populations varies between 65% and 81%.[2]
There is no statistically significant sexual dimorphism in this trait. A 1940 study by Alfred Sturtevant analyzed 282 people of mostly European ancestry and observed that 67.1% of females and 62.9% of males could roll their tongues, and the remaining could not do it.[3] A 1980 study with 992 people also found similar percentages, in 66.84% of females and 63.7% of males possessing the ability.[4]
In some cases, the ability can be learned by practice, more easily by children, but also by adults. For this reason, studies should allow time for individuals to learn this and other abilities. This also indicates that it's not a simple hereditary trait, and there are other factors involved.[2][3][5]
In the first paper about this trait as a genetic trait, Sturtevant concluded that the ability "is conditioned at least in part by heredity", and suggests that "it is possible, though not proved, that ability to turn up the edges of the tongue may be due to a single dominant gene, with the fairly frequent occurrence of additional complications".[3][6] These findings, however, have been questioned.
Several
One explanation for the pattern is that the trait has
Related abilities
Cloverleaf tongue is the ability to fold the tongue in a certain configuration with multiple bends. This trait has been speculated by David D. Whitney in 1950 to be a dominant trait inherited separately from tongue rolling.[11]
Other tongue ability is folding the tip of the tongue upwards, which has been proposed as a recessive trait in a 1948 study, with possible epistatic interaction with the rolling gene.[5][11]
Twisting the tongue has also been studied, which is to rotate the tongue approximately 90 degrees from the plane of the blade, both to the right and to the left.[5]
A 1980 study analyzed if there was any interaction between ear wiggling and tongue rolling, and found it to be the case for males, with men more likely to have both abilities or none, but no interaction was found for females.[4]
In popular culture
In This Is Us, an adopted teenager asks strangers to roll their tongues in an attempt to locate his biological family using genetics.[12]
In the
See also
References
- ISBN 978-0-07-290584-7.
- ^ a b McDonald JH (December 8, 2011). "Myths of Human Genetics: Tongue Rolling". udel.edu. Retrieved 2023-01-05.
- ^ PMID 16588317.
- ^ a b Hernandez M (1980). "La movilidad del pabellon auditivo". Trab. Antropol. XVIII (4): 199–203.
- ^ PMID 5419380.
- ^ "Observable Human Characteristics". Genetic Science Learning Center - Learn.Genetics. 2016. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
- – via OUP.
- PMID 5165087.
- PMID 1236879.
- PMID 11463150.
- ^ a b "Tongue Curling, Folding, Or Rolling". OMIM - Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man. Retrieved 2023-01-05.
- ^ Bamber J (6 February 2017). "'This Is Us' "The Trip" Explores the Past to Cast Light on the Present". PopMatters. Retrieved 2023-01-05.
- ^ Emma Majoros (13 March 2021). "Powerpuff Girls: 10 Things You Never Knew About Buttercup". Gamerant.