There are still parts of the mouse brain that we need to explore: the developmental mouse brain,
the female brain differences.
Not exact matches
There are physiological
differences in a male
brain and a
female brain, same as there is with the body.
There are physiological
differences in a
female brain and a male
brain.
(II) All kinds of
brain operations alter the personality of a patient to some degree; many pharmaca, particularly lysergic acid, alter the
brain functions to great extents; and the male and
female sexual hormones cause the psychic
differences between man and woman — injections of the opposite hormone can alter the sexual mentality to a high degree.
[1] See for example: Louann Brizendine, The
Female Brain, Harmony, New York, 2007 or Simon B. Cohen, The Essential
Difference: Men, Women and the extreme male
Brain, Penguin, London, 2012.
These influences, along with hormonal ones — such as levels of estrogen and testosterone — affect
brain development, shaping male and
female differences in physiology and behavior that continue to unfold as we age.
Hormones drive many of these sex
differences, while major life events — such as puberty, pregnancy, parenthood or even traumas — also help shape male and
female brain circuitry.
The finding that these neurons are present in the
brains of male but not
female flies indicates that this sex
difference in aggressive behavior is genetically based.
Also surprising was that while male and
female brains did not differ in cell counts in cortical regions, the study identified 11 subcortical areas with gender - specific
differences.
«First cell - type census of mouse
brains: Surprises about structure, male -
female differences: A multiyear project in the
Brain Initiative, qBrain is already revealing the brain as never before.&r
Brain Initiative, qBrain is already revealing the
brain as never before.&r
brain as never before.»
At the outset, Joel shared a popularly held assumption: just as sex
differences nearly always produce two different reproductive systems, they would also produce two different forms of
brains — one
female, the other male.
The way males and
females handle their anger or emotionally upsetting situations — women may feel sick to their stomach, while men tend to act out — may also stem from fundamental
differences in how their
brains have evolved.
The findings, published online this week by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, provide the strongest evidence to date in support of the notion that sex chromosomes acting on single cells play a role in
differences between male and
female brains.
For instance, a previous study discovered significant
differences between male and
female brains in four regions of white matter — and that
female - to - male trans individuals who hadn't had sex reassignment surgery had white matter in these regions that more closely resembled a male
brain.
The electric
brain signals, measured by using EEG, of males and
females show
differences.
«Male and
female brain rhythms show
differences.»
Even these trained eyes don't recognize a
difference between male and
female brain rhythms.
The hope is that by studying both males and
females, scientists will gain better insights into sex
differences ranging from behavior to
brain anatomy to drug metabolism.
Your call for caution in the use of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) as a research tool for assessing and explaining
brain function was timely (19 October, p 32), particularly as it is widely used to pinpoint male -
female differences in cognitive abilities and performance.
It's possible that this pattern of
female addiction could be linked to the
brain size
difference.
Kayt Sukel's feature on the
differences between male and
female brains states: «Men still outnumber women in mathematics, engineering and...
Kayt Sukel's feature on the
differences between male and
female brains states: «Men still outnumber women in mathematics, engineering and many areas of science... [women] start lagging behind as they grow up and enter further education» (26 May, p 44).
They therefore investigated whether women's
brains work differently than men's and whether this
difference is modulated by psychological (male or
female traits) or endocrinological (hormonal variations) factors.
In her new book, Pink
Brain Blue Brain: How Small Differences Grow Into Troublesome Gaps and What We Can Do About It, Eliot dispels many myths about male and female brain develop
Brain Blue
Brain: How Small Differences Grow Into Troublesome Gaps and What We Can Do About It, Eliot dispels many myths about male and female brain develop
Brain: How Small
Differences Grow Into Troublesome Gaps and What We Can Do About It, Eliot dispels many myths about male and
female brain develop
brain development.
Four years ago, when Lawrence Summers suggested that the scarcity of prominent
female scientists and engineers was in part because there are fewer women on the extremes of the range of innate math ability — fewer geniuses and fewer duds — he stirred up a lot of misguided arguments about gender
differences in the
brain.
He calls Eagly and Wood's theory «bizarre» for positing that «natural selection has shaped sex
differences in male and
female bodies, but not in male and
female brains and the psychological adaptations those
brains contain.»
Male birds tend to be better singers than
females — but does the basis for this
difference lie in the
brain or in the syrinx, the bird equivalent of our larynx?
George Washington University (GW) researcher Valerie Hu, Ph.D., has found an important sex - dependent
difference in the level of RORA protein in
brain tissues of males and
females.
Despite profound sex
differences in the expression of social behavior and the incidence of these psychiatric disorders, little is known about how the
brain mechanisms underlying these phenomena differ in
females and males.
Fixed in an ancestral past that rewarded competitive men and caring women, these
differences are supposedly re-created in each generation by sex hormones and male and
female brains.
All the wellness news you need to know, including a vegetarian school in Brooklyn,
differences between the male and
female brain, and new blood...
«With the slightly different wiring of male and
female brains, and what our fundamental roles have been over history, there is are slight physical and chemical
differences in male and
female brains,» she says.
Because no matter what you think about the
difference between
female and male
brains, when it comes to these artistic and intellectual pursuits, the individual skills are the same for men and women.
Neuroscience research has found many similarities and
differences between
female and male
brains.
Some might try to attribute these trends to biological factors such as fundamental
differences in
brain structure by applying the argument that biological
differences make
females less capable in mathematics and less inclined to have an affinity for the subject.
Assumptions are often made that
differences in patterns of
brain activation between
females and males in a particular task must mean that
females and males use different mental processes to complete that task; however, mental processes are highly complex and involve interaction between many different regions of the
brain (Fine, 2013).
The trouble, because gender is so significant for personal identity, is that we're particularly susceptible to arguments that there are fundamental, biological
differences in, say, «male» and «
female»
brains and that these explain variations in educational achievement.
Forget the idea of male and
female brains; it's the different ways we treat boys and girls that lead to
differences in school attainment, says Catherine Scott.
Of course there are
differences in male and
female canine
brains, and studies have shown that there are
differences in the way male and
female dogs think.
Having and expressing sexist views is not illegal; however, it is reprehensible and, in relation to measurable
differences in the physiology or performance of male and
female brains, scientifically inaccurate.
In adolescence, there are real
differences in
brain functions between male and
female brains.
There are several reasons for this
difference, including the fact that young girls are socialized to pay more attention to the feelings of others, and new biological data suggests that
females may be better equipped neurocognitively (translation:
brains and hormones) to pay attention to and interpret the feelings of others.2
We hypothesized that whole -
brain and region - of - interest analyses would identify
differences in cortical thickness in prefrontal (especially anterior cingulate, middle frontal gyrus and orbitofrontal cortex)
brain regions in
female adolescents with early onset SUD, compared to controls.
Considering these
differences in behavior, and the clear sex
differences in
brain anatomy / function during adolescence, it is reasonable that males and
females may have different, as well as overlapping, biological underpinnings to SUD.