The
gender taxonomy is a
classification of the range of different levels at which
humans vary in
sexual characteristics. It is mainly used by medical specialists working in the area of
sex research.
John Money and
Milton Diamond are probably the best known researchers in this field.
Money earned his
PhD for research into human
hermaphroditism and
pseudohermaphroditism, now known as
intersex conditions. The
taxonomy starts at the simplest,
biological level and traces differentiations expressed at the increasingly complicated levels produced over the course of the human
life cycle.
- chromosomes (46,XX; 46,XY; 47,XXY ("Klinefelter's syndrome"); 45,X0 ("Turner syndrome"); 47,XYY; 47,XXX ("Triple X syndrome"); XXXX syndrome; XXXXX syndrome, 48,XXYY syndrome, 46,XX/XY mosaic, other mosaic, and others)
- gonads (testes, ovaries, one of each, ovotestes, other types of gonadal dysgenesis)
- hormones (androgens: including testosterone; estrogens, including estradiol, estriol, estrone; antiandrogens and others)
- genitals (primary sexual characteristics — see diagram for the "six class system")
- secondary sexual characteristics (dimorphic physical characteristics, other than primary characteristics)
- brain structure (special kinds of secondary characteristics, due to their influence on psychology and behaviour)
- gender identity (psychological identification with either of the two main sexes)
- gender role (social conformity with expectations for either of the two main sexes)
- erotic preference (gynephilia, androphilia, bisexuality, asexuality and various paraphilias).