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Similarity in transgender and cisgender children’s gender development
Author(s) -
Selin Gülgöz,
Jessica J. Glazier,
Elizabeth A. Enright,
Daniel J. Alonso,
Lily Durwood,
Anne A. Fast,
R. Sandlin Lowe,
Chonghui Ji,
Jeffrey Heer,
Carol Lynn Martin,
Kristina R. Olson
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.1909367116
Subject(s) - transgender , gender identity , psychology , developmental psychology , biological sex , gender psychology , gender role , gender dysphoria , social psychology , psychoanalysis
Gender is one of the central categories organizing children's social world. Clear patterns of gender development have been well-documented among cisgender children (i.e., children who identify as a gender that is typically associated with their sex assigned at birth). We present a comprehensive study of gender development (e.g., gender identity and gender expression) in a cohort of 3- to 12-y-old transgender children ( n = 317) who, in early childhood, are identifying and living as a gender different from their assigned sex. Four primary findings emerged. First, transgender children strongly identify as members of their current gender group and show gender-typed preferences and behaviors that are strongly associated with their current gender, not the gender typically associated with their sex assigned at birth. Second, transgender children's gender identity (i.e., the gender they feel they are) and gender-typed preferences generally did not differ from 2 comparison groups: cisgender siblings ( n = 189) and cisgender controls ( n = 316). Third, transgender and cisgender children's patterns of gender development showed coherence across measures. Finally, we observed minimal or no differences in gender identity or preferences as a function of how long transgender children had lived as their current gender. Our findings suggest that early sex assignment and parental rearing based on that sex assignment do not always define how a child identifies or expresses gender later.

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