Why Can't a Man Be More Like a Woman?

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Why Can't a Man Be More Like a Woman? Page 18

by Wolpert, Lewis;


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  Hawke, J. L., R. K. Olson, E. G. Willcutt, S. J. Wadsworth and J. DeFries, ‘Gender Ratios for Reading Difficulties’, Dyslexia 15 (2009), 239–42

  Hyde, J., and M. Linn, ‘Gender Differences in Verbal Ability: A Meta-analysis’, Psychological Bulletin 104.1 (1988), 53–69

  Kaushanskaya, M., V. Marian and J. Yoo, ‘Gender Differences in Adult Word Learning’, Acta Psychologica 137 (2011), 24–35

  Logan, S., and R. Johnston, ‘Investigating Gender Differences in Reading’, Educational Review 62 (2010), 175–87

  Mehl, M. R., S. Vazire, N. Ramírez-Esparza, R. B. Slatcher and J. W. Pennebaker, ‘Are Women Really More Talkative Than Men?’, Science 317 (2007), 82

  Newman, M. L., C. J. Groom, L. D. Handelman and J. W. Pennebaker, ‘Gender Differences in Language Use: an Analysis of 14,000 Text Samples’, Discourse Processes 45 (2008), 211–36

  Ozçalişkan, S., and S. Goldin-Meadow, ‘Sex Differences in Language First Appear in Gesture’, Developmental Science 13 (2010), 752–60

  Sommer, I. E., A. Aleman, M. Somers, M. P. Boks and R. S. Kahn, ‘Sex Differences in Handedness, Asymmetry of the Planum Temporale and Functional Language Lateralization’, Brain Research 1206 (2008), 76–88

  Tannen, D. ‘Gender and Family Interaction’, in J. Holmes and M. Meyerhoff, The Handbook on Language and Gender Basil Blackwell, 2013, 179–201

  Tenenbaum, H. R., S. Ford and B. Alkhedairy, ‘Telling Stories: Gender Differences in Peers’ Emotion Talk and Communication Style’, British Journal of Developmental Psychology 29 (2011), 707–21

  Van den Brink, D., J. J. Van Berkum, M. C. Bastiaansen, C. M. Tesink, M. Kos, J. K. Buitelaar and P. Hagoort, ‘Empathy Matters: ERP Evidence for Inter-individual Differences in Social Language Processing’, Neuropsychologia 46 (2008), 1349–62

  Vigil, J. M., ‘A Socio-relational Framework of Sex Differences in the Expression of Emotion’, Behavioural and Brain Sciences 32 (2009), 375–90

  Wallentin, M., ‘Putative Sex Differences in Verbal Abilities and Language Cortex: A Critical Review’, Brain and Language 108 (2009), 175–8

  Zimmerman, D., and C. West, ‘Sex Roles, Interruptions and Silences in Conversation’, in B. Thorne and N. Henley (eds), Language and Sex: Difference and Dominance, Newbury House, 1977, 105–29

  12 Health

  Badcock, C., ‘The Imprinted Brain: How Genes Set the Balance between Autism and Psychosis’, Epigenomics 3 (2011), 345–59

  Cheslack-Postava, K., and R. M. Jordan-Young, ‘Autism Spectrum Disorders: Toward a Gendered Embodiment Model,’ Social Science and Medicine 74 (2012), 1667–74

  Diller, J. W., C. H. Patros and P. R. Prentice, ‘Temporal Discounting and Heart Rate Reactivity to Stress’, Behavioural Processes 87 (2011), 306–9

  Dreyer, R., M. Arstall, R. Tavella, C. Morgan, A. Weekes and J. Beltram, ‘Gender Differences in Patients with Stable Angina Attending Primary Care Practices’, Heart, Lung and Circulation 20 (2011), 452–9

  Galderisi, S., P. Bucci, A. Üçok, and J. Peuskens, ‘No Gender Differences in Social Outcome in Patients Suffering from Schizophrenia’, European Psychiatry 27 (2012), 406–8

  Guarner-Lans, V., M. E. Rubio-Ruiz, I. Pérez-Torres and G. Baños de MacCarthy, ‘Relation of Aging and Sex Hormones to Metabolic Syndrome and Cardiovascular Disease’, Experimental Gerontology 46 (2011), 517–23

  Kay, K., and C. Shipman, The Confidence Code: The Science and Art of Self-Assurance–What Women Should Know HarperCollins, 2014

  Kryspin-Exner, I., E. Lamplmayr and A. Felnhofer, ‘Geropsychology: The Gender Gap in Human Aging–a Mini-review’, Gerontology 57 (2011), 539–48

  Lockshin, M. D., ‘Nonhormonal Explanations for Sex Discrepancy in Human Illness’, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 193 (2010), 22–4

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  Nasser, E. H., N. Walders and J. H. Jenkins, ‘The Experience of Schizophrenia: What’s Gender Got to Do with It? A Critical Review of the Current Status of Research on Schizophrenia’, Schizophrenia Bulletin 28 (2002), 351–62

  Needham, B., and T. D. Hill, ‘Do Gender Differences in Mental Health Contribute to Gender Differences in Physical Health?’, Social Science and Medicine 71 (2010), 1472–9

  Piccinelli, M., and G. Wilkinson, ‘Gender Differences in Depression: Critical Review’, British Journal of Psychiatry 177 (2000), 486–92

  Rakison, D. H., ‘Does Women’s Greater Fear of Snakes and Spiders Originate in Infancy?’, Evolution and Human Behaviour 30 (2009), 439–44

  Rogers, N., M. Stafford and A. Steptoe, Financial Circumstances, Health and Well-Being of the Older Population in England: The 2008 English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (Wave 4), Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2010

  Strong, J., T. Mathews, R. Sussex, F. New, S. Hoey, and G. Mitchell, ‘Pain Language and Gender Differences When Describing a Past Pain Event’, Pain 145 (2009), 86–95

  Van Abeelen, A. F., S. G. Elias, P. M. Bossuyt, D. E. Grobbee, Y. T. Van der Schouw, T. J. Roseboom and C. S. Uiterwaal, ‘Famine Exposure in the Young and the Risk of Type 2 Diabetes in Adulthood’ Diabetes 61:9 (2012) 2255–60

  Waddell, J. and M. M. McCarthy, ‘Sexual Differentiation of the Brain and ADHD: What Is a Sex Difference in Prevalence Telling Us?’, Current Topics in Neuroscience 9 (2012), 341–60

  Index

  academic careers, 16, 110, 121–2

  Adam’s apples, 26–7

  addiction, 151, 153, 159

  ADHD see attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

  Afghanistan, 12

  Africa, 82

  age: health and well-being in old age, 170–2; and partner choice, 36, 38, 80

  aggression: in adolescents, 71; in children, 58, 59; in conversation, 146; and dementia, 156; sexual differentiation, 32, 37–8, 94–6, 100

  Agnodice, 111

  agoraphobia, 162

  agriculture see farming

  alcohol abuse, 151, 153, 155, 156, 159

  Alkhedairy, B., 146

  Allendorfer, J. B., 142

  Alzheimer’s disease, 156

  Amazons, 10

  Amge, Jyoti, 26

  amygdala: and emotions, 50–1, 95, 99; function overview, 50–1; and health, 165; and sexual desire, 78, 86; sexual differentiation, 50–1, 52; and transsexuality, 92

  Anaximander, 28

  Anderson, Mary, 112

  andropause, 77

  anger, communicating, 108

  angina, 166

  annexin, 164

  anorexia nervosa, 163

  anxiety, 38, 51, 71, 100, 106

  apology, 107

  Aquinas, Thomas, 12, 111

  Aristotle, 1, 10, 28

  arthritis, 151, 154, 168

  Assyria, 9

  astrology, 108

  astronomy, 111–12

  Athens, 9–10, 111

  attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), 151, 161–2

  attractiveness, 78–83

  auditory-spatial abilities see visuospatial abilities

  Augustine, St, 12

  Australia, 72–3

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sp; autism, 98–9, 142, 152, 159–61

  autoimmune disorders, 46, 151, 152, 164, 167–8, 177

  axons, 45–6, 53

  babies, 55–7, 59–62, 97, 127; see also children

  Babylonians, 9

  Badcock, Christopher, 160–1

  Bancroft, John, 74

  Bao, A.-M., 80

  Barnes, D., 146–7

  Baron-Cohen, Simon, 6, 96, 97–8, 118–19, 160

  beauty see attractiveness

  Beilock, S. L., 114

  Beltz, A. M., 69, 70

  bereavement, 154

  Berenbaum, S. A., 69, 70

  Bertoncini, J., 147–8

  Bible, 10, 11, 28

  bipolar disorder, 155

  birth order, and homosexuality, 90, 177

  Bitan, T., 142

  Blackwell, Elizabeth, 112

  blood pressure, 169

  body language, 104–5

  Body Mass Index (BMI), 81

  Booth, J. R., 142

  brain: and ageing, 170, 172; activity during sexual stimulation, 77–8; early studies, 5; embryonic development, 19, 20; and emotions, 3, 50–1, 52, 95, 99, 101–2, 105–6; and gender identity, 60, 61; and health, 160–1, 162; and imprinting, 22; and language, 52, 53–4, 126, 138–9, 142–3; maturation in infants, 55; and mathematics ability, 117; and mental health, 157; and paedophilia, 92; and pain perception, 158; and reproduction, 36–7; and sexual activity, 19, 78–86, 177; sexual differentiation, 2–4, 22, 45–54, 67; and sexual orientation, 52, 90, 91–2, 177; size, 48, 176; and skills, 52, 53–4, 125–6, 127, 132–3, 135; and social conditioning, 47–8, 49–50, 54, 67, 176; and stress, 103–4; structure, 45–6, 176

  breasts, 22, 42–3, 82–3

  British Psychological Society, 124

  Brizendine, Louann, 148

  Broca’s area, 52, 138

  bulimia, 163

  bullying, 178

  Burma, 82

  Burman, D. D., 142

  business ownership, 123

  cacosmia, 27

  CAH see congenital adrenal hyperplasia

  Cahill, Larry, 45

  Cameron, Deborah, 6–7, 148, 149

  cancer, 169

  cardiovascular disease, 151, 152, 153, 164–6

  care work, 63

  Carlin, George, 45

  cerebral cortex, 52

  cerebrum, 50–1

  Chamberlain, Wilt, 74

  Chandri Bahadur Dangi, 26

  Châtelet, Émilie du, 112

  Chen, John, 122

  Cheslack-Postava, K., 56, 159–60

  chess, 136

  Childe, Veer Gordon, 40

  children: autism in, 159–60; child-care responsibilities, 124; crying, 105; development of gender identity, 59–71; and empathy, 55–6, 57, 66, 97–8; homosexuals’ desire to reproduce, 86; and language, 57, 58, 140–2, 146; male–female education performance, 113–14; paedophilia, 84, 90, 92–3; sexual differentiation, 55–71, 175–6; sociability, 99–100; and visuospatial abilities, 127

  chimpanzees, 5, 34–7, 64–5; see also primates

  China: ancient, 12, 28–9; modern, 122

  Christian church, 11–12, 28

  chromosomes, 19, 21, 24–5, 46–7, 91–2, 152–3

  chronic fatigue syndrome, 151, 168

  cirrhosis, 167–8

  Clinton, Hillary, 17

  clitorises, 74

  clothing, 60, 62, 65–6

  cognitive functioning: and ageing, 170–1; and chromosomes, 25; sexual differentiation, 127; see also intelligence

  Cohen, Nichola Rice, 134–5

  Collaer, M. L., 128

  colours: detecting colour change, 126; favourite, 65–6

  communications see language skills

  complaining, 107

  computing, 122

  confidence, 179

  Confucius, 12

  congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH): and the brain, 50; and career choice, 121; and children’s drawings, 66; and children’s play, 58; effects overview, 24; and emotions, 95, 99; and language, 144; and sexual activity, 88–9; and sexual orientation, 177; and skills, 128, 129, 134, 177; and teenage interests, 64; and transsexuality, 91–2

  Congress members, 13

  conversation styles, 146–7

  Cook, Captain James, 93

  copulation, history of, 33

  corpus callosum, 50, 90

  cortisol, 69, 95, 103

  Cosby, Bill, 138

  cosmetics, and health, 168

  coughs, 169–70

  courtship, 84–5

  creation myths, 28–9

  crime, 94–5

  crying, 105, 140–1

  Curie, Marie, 112

  Darwin, Charles, 14–15, 29, 31, 42

  Dawkins, Richard, 43–4

  Dedovic, Katarina, 63

  Del Giudice, M., 100

  dementia, 156

  dendrites, 46

  dentists, 123

  depression, 69, 106, 107, 154–6, 164

  diabetes, 152, 163, 167

  Diller, J. W., 166

  Diprete, T. A., 127

  direction finding see spatial orienting

  discrimination: and biological differences, 14–16; explanations, 178; in fiction, 16; modern changes, 17; overview, 8–16; women as victims, 178

  doctors see medicine and doctors

  dogs, evolution of, 29–30

  dolls, 57, 62, 63, 64–5, 137

  dominance, 96, 100

  dopamine, 159

  drawings, children’s, 66

  Dreyer, R., 166

  driving, 135

  drug abuse, 151, 159

  dyslexia, 142, 161

  eating disorders, 151, 163

  education: adolescent interest in science, 120–1; history of female, 111; male–female performance, 113–14, 117–18, 127; teachers’ sex, 114, 123

  Egypt, ancient, 9, 84, 111

  Ekeblad, Eva, 112

  embryo development, 18–25, 174

  emotions: and the brain, 3, 50–1, 52, 95, 99, 101–2, 105–6; and evolution, 32, 97, 104, 105; and hormones, 95–6, 99, 100, 103, 106; sexual differentiation, 94–109

  empathy: and the brain, 101–2; in children, 55–6, 57, 66, 97–8; and evolution, 32, 175; and information processing, 147; sexual differentiation, 96–9; and study of mathematics and science, 118–19

  Epstein, Ira, 133

  erectile dysfunction, 152

  estradiol, 25

  Eve, 10

  evolution: and emotions, 32, 97, 104, 105; and health, 167; and language, 140, 150; and partner choice, 78–80; and phobias, 162–3; role, 31–2; and sexual activity, 31–2, 33–40; and sexual differentiation, 28–44, 174–5, 176–7; and skills, 126, 128; theory of, 29–31

  exercise, and heart health, 166

  eye contact, 55–6, 81, 97

  faces: attractiveness, 79–80; facial expressions, 94, 95, 101, 104, 105, 149; facial recognition, 131–2; recognition of own, 61

  farming, 40–2

  fathers see parents and parenting

  fear, 56, 104–5, 162–3

  female genital mutilation, 14

  feminism, 4, 17

  fiction: author gender statistics, 146; discrimination in, 16

  Fine, Cordelia, 47

  finger length, 22–3, 88

  Finland, 13

  fMRI see functional magnetic resonance imaging

  food: chimpanzees’ obtaining of, 36; eating disorders, 151, 163; labour division, 40–2; malnutrition, 163; and mating, 39–40

  foot binding, 12

  Ford, S., 146

  Fragile X syndrome, 161

  France, 13

  Freeman, Derek, 85

  Freud, Sigmund, 15–16

  friendship see relationships

  Frith, Uta, 125–6

  frontal lobes, 126

  functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), 49

  Galderisi, Silvana, 156–7

  Galton, Francis, 15

  games see sport; toys and
play

  Gambia, 77

  Gangestad, S. W., 79

  gastrulation, 20

  gender: boys raised as girls, 69–70; development of gender identity, 59–71; as distinct from sex, 5–6; gender tests, 70–1

  genes: and ageing, 172; and autism, 160–1; and the brain, 46–8, 54; and evolution, 29–31; function, 19; and health, 177; and reproduction, 176–7; role in embryo development, 18–25, 174; and sexual differentiation, 2–4, 21–5, 46–8; and sexual orientation, 3, 89–90; and transsexuality, 91

  geometry, 116

  Germany, 111–12

  ghosts, 108

  Ginsburg, J., 103

  Goldberg, Rube, 20

  Goldin-Meadow, S., 141

  Goldstein, J. M., 103–4

  gonadal steroids, 162

  governmental heads, 123

  grammar, 147

  Gray, John, 6

  Greece, ancient, 9–10, 28, 111

  Greer, Germaine, 17

  grey matter, 46, 52–3, 126, 143, 170, 176

  Gross, Sam, 74

  Guarner-Lans, V., 152

  haemoglobin, 26

  haemophilia A, 152–3

  Halpern, Diane, 48

  Hamann, S., 106

  Hamilton, William D., 41

  happiness, and attractiveness, 80–1

  Havy, M., 147–8

  Hawking, Stephen, 5

  Haworth, C. M., 114

  headaches, 158

  health, 151–72, 177; in old age, 170–2; see also mental health

  hearing, sense of, 27, 140

  heart disease see cardiovascular disease

  heart size, 26

  height, 25–6

  Herodotus, 9

  Herschel, Caroline, 112

  Hertenstein, M. J., 108

  Hesiod, 10

  Hill, T. D., 153

  Hines, Melissa, 49–50, 65, 125

  hippocampus, 52, 54, 106, 138–9, 172

  Hispaniola, 23–4

  HIV, 170

  homosexuality: and the brain, 52, 90, 91–2, 177; determination of orientation, 86–90, 177; frequency statistics, 86; and male–female skills, 89, 132; among primates, 35; in primitive societies, 87

  hormones: and ageing, 171; and attractiveness, 80; and autism, 160; and the brain, 3, 46, 51; and career choice, 121; and children’s play, 57–8, 65, 176; and eating disorders, 163; effect of pregnancy treatment hormones, 64; and emotions, 95–6, 99, 100, 103, 106; and eye contact, 55–6; and falling in love, 102; and gender identity, 65, 68–70; and gender role, 60; and health, 152, 158, 159, 162, 164–5, 170; and insomnia, 164; and language, 144; and learning difficulties and hyperactivity, 162; and memory, 131; and mental health, 154–5, 157; and puberty, 25, 68; and reproduction, 75; role in embryo development, 19; and sexual behaviour, 35; and sexual differentiation, 21–,5, 174; and sexual orientation, 86–7, 88–9, 90, 177; and skills, 127–8, 129–30, 131, 132, 135, 177; and strength, 26; and stress, 103–4; and transsexuality, 91; see also oestrogens; testosterone

 

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