AllisonD. B. (1996) The use of discordant sibling pairs for finding genetic loci linked to obesity: practical considerations. International Journal of Obesity, 20, 553–560.
2.
AllmanW. F. (1995) The stone age present: how evolution shaped modern life: from sex, violence and language to emotions, morals and communities. New York: Touchstone.
3.
AltmanD. G.MachinD.BryantT. N.GardnerM. J. (Eds.) (2000) Statistics with confidence: confidence intervals and statistical guidelines. (2nd ed.) London: BMJ Books.
4.
AndersonK. G. (2006) How well does paternity confidence match actual paternity? Evidence from worldwide nonpaternity rates. Current Anthropology, 47, 513–520.
5.
AshtonG. C. (1980) Mismatches in genetic markers in a large family study. American Journal of Human Genetics, 32, 601–613.
6.
BakerR. (1996) Sperm wars: the science of sex. New York: Basic Books.
7.
BakerR. (2000) Sex in the future: the reproductive revolution and how it will change us. New York: Arcade.
8.
BakerR. R.BellisM. A. (1995) Human sperm competition: copulation, masturbation, and infidelity. London: Chapman & Hall.
9.
BakerR.OramE. (1998) Baby wars: the dynamics of family conflict. Hopewell, NJ: Ecco Press.
10.
BakkerE.BontenE. J.VeenemaH.Den DunnenJ. T.GrootscholtenP. M.Van OmmenG. J.PearsonP. L. (1989) Prenatal diagnosis of Duchenne muscular dystrophy: a three-year experience in a rapidly evolving field. Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease, 12(Suppl. 1), 174–190.∗
11.
BatemanD.BougheyA. M.ScaravilliF.MarsdenC. D.HardingA. E. (1992) A follow-up study of isolated cases of suspected Huntington's disease. Annals of Neurology, 31,293–298.∗
12.
BejjaniB.FinnR.MilunskyA.AmosJ. (1991) The value of deletion analysis for carrier detection in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Clinical Genetics, 39, 245–252.∗
13.
BellisM. A.HughesK. E.HughesS. K.AshtonJ. R. (2005) Measuring paternal discrepancy and its public health consequences. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 59, 749–754.
14.
BirkheadT. (2000) Promiscuity: an evolutionary history of sperm competition and sexual conflict. London: Faber & Faber.
15.
Bonaïti-PellieC.PoissonN.BechtelY.BechtelP. (1992) Sensitivity of transmission probabilities to paternity exclusion in segregation analysis. Genetic Epidemiology, 9, 67–71.∗
16.
BöökJ. A. (1950) Clinical and genetical studies of hypodontia: I. Premolar aplasia, hyperhidrosis, and canities prematura; a new hereditary syndrome in man. American Journal of Human Genetics, 2, 240–263.∗
17.
BosterJ. S.HodsonR. R.GaulinS. J. C. (1999) High paternity certainties of Jewish priests. American Anthropologist, 100, 967–971.
18.
BrockD. J. H.ShrimptonA. E. (1991) Non-paternity and prenatal genetic screening. Lancet, 338, 1151.∗
BussD. M. (2005) The murderer next door: why the mind is designed to kill. New York: Penguin.
21.
Cerda-FloresR. M.BartonS. A.Marty-GonzalezL. F.RivasF.ChakrabortyR. (1999) Estimation of nonpaternity in the Mexican population of Nuevo León: a validation study with blood group markers. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 109, 281–293.∗
22.
ChatawayJ.SawcerS.FeakesR.CoradduF.BroadleyS.JonesH. B.ClaytonD.GrayJ.GoodfellowP. N.CompstonA. (1999) A screen of candidates from peaks of linkage: evidence for the involvement of myeloperoxidase in multiple sclerosis. Journal of Neuroimmunology, 98, 208–213.∗
23.
ChrastilE. R.GetzW. M.EulerH. A.StarksP. T. (2006) Paternity uncertainty overrides sex chromosome selection for preferential grandparenting. Evolution and Human Behavior, 27, 206–223.
DavisM. B.BatemanD.QuinnN. P.MarsdenC. D.HardingA. E. (1994) Mutation analysis in patients with possible but apparently sporadic Huntington's disease. Lancet, 344,714–717.
26.
DefriesJ. C.AshtonG. C.JohnsonR. C.KuseA. R.McClearnG. E.MiM. P.RashadM. N.VandenbergS. C.WilsonJ. R. (1976) Parent-offspring resemblance for specific cognitive abilities in two ethnic groups. Nature, 261, 131–133.
27.
DiamondJ. (1985) Everything else you always wanted to know about sex but that we were afraid you'd never ask. Discover, 6(4), 70–82.
28.
EdwardsJ. H. (1957) A critical examination in the reputed primary influence of ABO phenotype on fertility and sex ratio. British Journal of Preventive and Social Medicine, 11, 79–89.
29.
GreilingH.BussD. M. (2000) Women's sexual strategies: the hidden dimension of extrapair mating. Personality and Individual Differences, 28, 929–963.
30.
GrünfeldJ-P. (1985) Nephrology Forum: the clinical spectrum of hereditary nephritis. Kidney International, 27, 83–92.
31.
HaasH.WaldenmaierC. (2004) Der Kuckucksfactor [The cuckoldry factor]. Prien, Ger.: Gennethos.
32.
HelgasonA.HrafnkelssonB.GulcherJ. R.WardR.StefánssonK. (2003) A populationwide coalescent analysis of Icelandic matrilineal and patrilineal genealogies: evidence for a faster evolutionary rate of mtDNA lineages than Y chromosomes. American Journal of Human Genetics, 72, 1370–1388.
33.
HeyerE.PuymiratJ.DieltjesP.BakkerE.De KnijffP. (1997) Estimating Y chromosome specific microsatellite mutation frequencies using deep rooting pedigrees. Human Molecular Genetics, 6, 799–803.∗
34.
HirschJ.VettaA. (1978) Gli errori concettuali dell'analisi genetico comportamentale [Conceptual errors in behavioral genetic analyses]. Ricerche di Psicologia, 78, 47–67.∗
35.
JequierA. M. (1985) Non-therapy related pregnancies in the consorts of a group of men with obstructive azoospermia. Andrologia, 17, 6–8.∗
36.
JoblingM. A.HeyerE.DieltjesP.De KnijffP. (1999) Y-chromosome-specific microsatellite mutation rates re-examined using a minisatellite, MSY1. Human Molecular Genetics, 8, 2117–2120.
37.
JohnstoneJ. M. (1954) Heterospecific pregnancy. British Journal of Preventive and Social Medicine, 8, 117–123.∗
38.
Le RouxM-G.PascalO.AndreM-T.HerbertO.DavidA.MoisanJ-P. (1992) Nonpaternity and genetic counseling. Lancet, 340, 607.∗
39.
LiG. C. (1961) Human genetics: principles and methods. New York: McGraw-Hill.
40.
MacCluerJ. W.SchullW. J. (1963) On the estimation of the frequency of nonpaternity. American Journal of Human Genetics, 15, 191–202.
41.
MacIntyreS.SoomanA. (1991) Non-paternity and prenatal genetic screening. Lancet, 338, 869–871.
42.
MackayJ. (2000) The Penguin Atlas of human sexual behavior. London: Penguin Books.
43.
MarksL. V. (2001) Sexual chemistry: a history of the contraceptive pill. New Haven, CT: Yale Univer. Press.
44.
MatorrasR.DiezJ.CorcósteguiB.Gutiérrez De TeránG.GarciaJ. M.PijoanJ. L.Rodríguez-EscuderoF. J. (1996) Spontaneous pregnancy in couples waiting for artificial insemination donor because of severe male infertility. European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 70, 175–178.∗
45.
McFaddenD. E.KwongL. C.YamI. Y.LangloisS. (1993) Parental origin of triploidy in human fetuses: evidence for genomic imprinting. Human Genetics, 92, 465–469.∗
46.
MorrisM. J.TylerA.LazarouL.MeredithL.HarperP. S. (1989) Problems in genetic prediction for Huntington's disease. Lancet, 2, 601–603.∗
47.
NanceM. A.LeroyB. S.OrrH. T.ParkerT.RichS. S.HestonL. L. (1991) Proto col for genetic testing in Huntington disease: three years of experience in Minnesota. American Journal of Medical Genetics, 40, 518–522.∗
48.
NealeM. C.NealeB. M.SullivanP. E. (2002) Nonpaternity in linkage studies of extremely discordant sib pairs. American Journal of Human Genetics, 70, 526–529.
49.
OlsenJ.Mæhle SchmidtM.ChristensenK. (1997) Evaluation of nature-nurture impact on reproductive health using half-siblings. Epidemiology, 8, 6–11.
50.
PeñalozaR.NúñezC.AlatorreS.LagunesR.García EscobarB.SalamancaF.ZavalaC. (1986) Recuencia de paternidad extraconyugal en una muestra de la poblacion Mexicana [Incidence of extra-conjugal paternity in a sample of the Mexican population]. Revista de Investigación Clinica, 38, 287–291.∗
51.
PeritzE. (1967) A statistical study of intrauterine selection factors related to the ABO system: I. The analysis of data on liveborn children. Annals of Human Genetics, 30, 259–271.
52.
PeritzE.RustP. E. (1972) On the estimation of the nonpaternity rate using more than one blood-group system. American Journal of Human Genetics, 24, 46–53.∗
53.
PhilippE. E. (1973) Discussion: moral, social, and ethical issues. In WilstenholmeG. E. W.FitzsimonsD. W. (Eds.), Law and ethics of A.I.D. and embryo transfer. (Ciba Foundation Symposium 17) London: Associated Scientific. Pp. 57–68.
54.
PoonM. C.AnandS.FraserB. M.HoarD. I.SinclairG. D. (1993) Hemophilia B carrier determination based on family-specific mutation detection by DNA single-strand conformation analysis. Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine, 122, 55–63.∗
55.
PotthoffR. F.WhittinghillM. (1965) Maximum-likelihood estimation of the proportion of nonpaternity. American Journal of Human Genetics, 17, 480–494.∗
56.
ProcopioM. (2005) Misattributed paternity: a bias in the family studies in schizophrenia?Medical Hypotheses, 64, 1046–1049.
57.
ReedT. E. (1967) Research on blood groups and selection from the Child Health and Development Studies, Oakland, California: I. Infant birth measurements. American Journal of Human Genetics, 19, 732–746.
58.
ReedT. E. (1968a) Research on blood groups and selection from the Child Health and Development Studies, Oakland, California: II. Gravidae's characteristics. American Journal of Human Genetics, 20, 119–128.
59.
ReedT. E. (1968b) Research on blood groups and selection from the Child Health and Development Studies, Oakland, California: III. Couple mating type and reproductive performance. American Journal of Human Genetics, 20, 129–141.
60.
RossL. E. (1996) Disclosing misattributed paternity. Bioethics, 10, 114–130.
61.
RussellR. J. H.WellsP. A. (1987) Estimating paternity confidence. Ethology and Sociobiology, 8, 215–220.
62.
SalmonD.SegerJ.SalmonC. (1980) Expected and observed proportion of subjects excluded from paternity by blood phenotypes of a child and its mother in a sample of 171 families. American Journal of Human Genetics, 32, 432–444.∗
63.
SampsonJ. R.ScahillS. J.StephensonJ. B. P.MannL.ConnorJ. M. (1989) Genetic aspects of tuberous sclerosis in the west of Scotland. Journal of Medical Genetics, 26, 28–31.∗
64.
SasseG. (1993) Häufigkeit und Bedeutung der Nicht-Vaterschaft in der Schweiz [Frequency and importance of nonpaternity in Switzerland], Unpublished dissertation, Univer. of Basel, Switz.
65.
SasseG.MüllerJ.ChakrabortyR.OttJ. (1994) Estimating the frequency of nonpaternity in Switzerland. Human Heredity, 44, 337–343.
66.
SchachtL. E.GershowitzH. (1963) Frequency of extra-marital children as determined by blood groups. In GeddaL. (Ed.), Proceedings of the Second International Congress on Human Genetics (Rome, Sept. 6–12, 1961). Vol. 2. Rome: Istituto G. Mendel. Vol. 2. Pp. 894–897.∗
67.
ScharfetterE. (1978) Alleged vs. biologically possible paternity. Behavior Genetics, 8, 383–384.
68.
ShrefflerD. C.SingC. F.NeelJ. V.GershowitzH.NapierJ. A. (1971) Studies on genetic selection in a completely ascertained Caucasian population: I. Frequencies, age and sex effects, and phenotype associations for 12 blood group systems. American Journal of Human Genetics, 23, 150–163.
69.
SingC. F.ShrefflerD. C.NeelJ. V.NapierJ. A. (1971) Studies on genetic selection in a completely ascertained Caucasian population: II. Family analysis of 11 blood group systems. American Journal of Human Genetics, 23, 164–198.∗
70.
SkoreckiK.SeligS.BlazerS.BradmanR.BradmanN.WaburtonP. J.IsmajlowiczM.HammerM. F. (1997) Y chromosomes of Jewish priests. Nature, 385, 32.
71.
SmithR. L. (1984) Human sperm competition. In SmithR. L. (Ed.), Sperm competition and the evolution of animal mating systems. Orlando, FL: Academic Press. Pp. 601–659.
72.
SnyderL. H. (1932) Studies in human inheritance: IX. The inheritance of taste deficiency in man. Ohio Journal of Science, 32, 436–440.∗
73.
SussmanL. N.SchatkinS. B. (1957) Blood-grouping tests in undisputed paternity proceedings. Journal of the American Medical Society, 164, 249–250.∗
74.
SykesB.IrvenC. (2000) Surnames and the Y chromosome. American Journal of Human Genetics, 66, 1417–1419.
75.
WienerA. S. (1966) Estimation of nonpaternity. American Journal of Human Genetics, 18, 309–310.
76.
WienerA. S.GordonE. B.HandmanL. (1949) Heredity of the Rh blood types: VIII. Additional family studies, with special reference to factor rhw. American Journal of Human Genetics, 1, 127–140.∗