Invitation to Psychology

(Barry) #1

144 Chapter 4 Neurons, Hormones, and the Brain


and females have shown different patterns of brain
activity while they were doing something or while
an ability was being tested, yet the sexes have
not actually differed in the behavior or ability in
question (Fine, 2010). If the behavioral differ-
ence you are interested in doesn’t exist, whatever
does it mean if you find a brain difference? One
MRI study of men and women with equivalent IQ
scores found that women’s brains had more white-
matter areas related to intelligence, whereas men’s
had more gray-matter areas related to intelligence
(Haier et al., 2005). That’s surely an interesting
finding for researchers, yet it shouldn’t obscure
the larger fact that the sexes do not differ in over-
all intelligence.

3


Sex differences in the brain do not account
for the fact that behavior depends on the situ-
ation. Consider empathy, a skill central to the
female stereotype. On self-report questionnaires,
women are more likely than men to describe
themselves as being high in empathy. But what
people say about themselves is often unrelated
to how they actually behave in various situa-
tions. When we hear that women are hardwired
to be empathic, therefore, we need to ask, which
women? Under what circumstances? Empathy
toward whom? Women are not more empathic
than men are toward people they don’t like,
whether family members they’re fighting with
or their country’s enemies. Over and over, if you
watch what people do rather than what they say
they would do, and vary the situations in which
they do it, gender differences fade (Fine, 2010;
Jordan-Young, 2010).

activity in the right amygdala, but in women, bet-
ter memory is associated with the left amygdala
(Cahill et al., 2004).
Is your own male or female brain spinning
yet? The bottom line is that some average sex dif-

Psychology in the News


do exist. But we are
still left with our sec-
ond question: What
do the differences mean
for the behavior or per-
sonality traits of men
and women in ordi-
nary life? When you hear or read popular accounts
of “sex and the brain,” keep these cautions in mind:

1


Many supposed gender differences in intuition,
abilities, and traits are stereotypes; they mis-
lead, because the overlap between the sexes is often
greater than the difference between them. Even
when gender differences are statistically signifi-
cant, they are often quite small in practical terms.
Some supposed differences, on closer inspection,
even disappear. Are women more talkative than
men, as many pop-psych books about the sexes as-
sert? To test this assumption, psychologists wired
up a sample of men and women with voice record-
ers that tracked their conversations while they
went about their daily lives. The sexes did not
differ in the number of words spoken; women and
men alike used about 16,000 words per day on av-
erage, with large individual differences among the
participants (Mehl et al., 2007).

2


a brain difference does not necessarily produce
a difference in behavior. In many studies, males

About Sex Differences
in the Brain

Cartoons like this one make most people laugh because men and women do differ, on average,
in things like “love of shopping” and “power-tool adoration.” But what does the research show
about sex differences in the brain? And what do they mean for how people behave in real life?

Thinking
CriTiCally

Jennifer K. Berman
Free download pdf