Does birth season affect personality and talent?

According to new studies, the birth season affects the personality and talent of each individual. According to the researchers, in the northern hemisphere, women born in May will be more impulsive, while people with birthdays in November will be quieter.

Men born in the spring are also more persistent than those born in the winter.

Another study revealed that people born in the fall are more likely to be physically agile and play football better, while those born in the spring are often smarter and more suited to fighting. more flags.

Picture 1 of Does birth season affect personality and talent? The study also found that people born from September to December were more frightened, and there was growing evidence that the incidence of schizophrenia was higher among those born in early winter early spring. .

Professor John Eagle, a psychiatrist at the Aberdeen University, who studied the relationship between fertility and mental health, said: 'The two main culprits are seasonal fluctuations and regimes. eat in nutrition, and increase the risk of infection during the winter. Genetic factors and other environmental causes play a role, so the birth season is only a contributing factor. '

Astrologers have provided evidence that the personality of each individual is influenced by their symbolic star and advocates for millions of people to see their horoscope every day.

However, the researchers emphasize that there are more essential biological reasons behind these effects than the positions of the stars and the motions of the planets.

Professor Jayanti Chotai, of UMEA University (Sweden) said that the amount of hormones produced by pregnant women varies depending on the season of the child being born . Temperature, infections, light exposure, changes in lifestyle and nutrition, all can change with the seasons, and are thought to affect these hormones.

Professor Chotai said: 'These changes are explained by the changing seasons of our solar system. For example, winters have less sunlight, lower temperatures, and viral diseases are more common. '