(E1, L5) Sex Differences Flashcards

1
Q

Why are there sex differences in the toys that children and monkeys choose to play with?

A
  • social influences (parents, peers, culture, etc.)
  • biological differences (monkeys chose the toys most associated with their sex when given a choice between toys they’d never seen before)
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2
Q

Describe the development of sex differences in toy choices.

A
  • Human sex differences in toy preferences emerge by 12 or 24 months and seem fixed by 36 months
  • Some data show that preferences are present before then due to eye tracking experiments
  • Color preferences don’t show up until 2 yrs old, so nurture may play a larger role
  • girls with CAH play with masculine toys more often than girls without CAH, with a dose-dependent effect
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3
Q

Why study sex differences?

A
  • differences between gender and sex
  • medicines and therapeutics–>each cell has a different sex
  • sex differences in brain and peripheral nervous system
  • important political, medical, and ecological implications
    – drug doses different between sexes
    – homosexuality had been seen as a mental health disorder
    –species of fish that start off as female and become male
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4
Q

What hormone receptors are influenced by sex differences?

A
  • estrogen receptors (both alpha and beta0
  • progesterone receptors
  • androgen receptors
  • corticosteroid receptors
  • dopamine neurons (NTs)
  • kisspeptin neurons (NTs)
    Cell numbers might be the same in brain regions between genders, but what is happening within those cells is different
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5
Q

What are sex differences in bullfrog brain mediate calling behavior?

A

Female bullfrog: less cells in POA contain AVT receptors
Male bullfrog: More cells in POA contain AVT receptors

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6
Q

Describe the sex differences in zebra finches

A
  • Sexually dimorphic brains
  • songbirds (males, not females) produce complex vocalizations that are learned during development
  • male zebra finches sing to attract females and ward off competing males
  • Females never sing, even after being treated with T in adulthood
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7
Q

What are the differences between Zebra Finches, Canaries, and Bay Wrens?

A

female zebra finches never sing: dimorphic brains
female canaries sometime sing: brains are different but similar
female bay wrens sing equal to males: brains are similar to males

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8
Q

What are the neural bases of sex differences in birdsong?

A
  • the volumes of several brain regions in songbirds display substantial sex differences
  • two major brain circuits for song show differences
    — efferent motor pathway
    — auditory transmission (or anterior forebrain) pathway
  • the sex differences in theses brain regions parallel sex differences in singing behavior
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9
Q

Describe the development of birdsong

A
  • The song learning process occurs in two stages
    1. during the sensory stage, a young bird hears and memorizes the song(s) of adult birds
    2. this is followed by the sensory-motor stage, where the bird tries to sing the song that is stored in his memory
  • crystallized songs –> recognizable as an altered version of father’s song
    (deaf birbs can still produce a song, but it is not crystallized after a father’s song)
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10
Q

What are the sex differences in brain regions relating to birdsong production?

A
  • HVC and RA of male zebra finches are 3-6 times larger than in females, and Area X cannot even be discerned in females
  • the larger size of these regions is due to the larger, more numerous and scattered neurons in these nuclei
  • Castrating adult male zebra finches reduces singing, but doesn’t change the size of the regions
  • androgen treatment of adult female finches does not change singing or size of brain regions
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11
Q

What are the types of sex differences (in humans)?

A

Qualitative differences (M behavior vs. F behavior)
Quantitative differences (FB overlaps MB)
Population differences (MB distribution vs. FB distribution)
Underlying Mechanisms Differ (Male Neural mechanisms vs. female neural mechanisms and their resulting behaviors)

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12
Q

What are the sex differences in relation to pain?

A
  • females generally have a lower threshold for pain and experience pain with greater intensity and frequency
  • natural variations in hormones effect pain, with estradiol enhancing pain detection (changes throughout menstrual cycle)
  • the opioid system activates in response to pain, but does so to a lesser extent in women
  • women are more frequently diagnosed with chronic pain
    (There are also social differences in the reporting of pain. i.e. males are more likely to report it to a male experimenter than a female experimenter)
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13
Q

What are the sex differences in relation to olfaction?

A
  • women are approximately 1000 times more sensitive to musk-like odors than men
    -These differences appear at puberty and are estrogen-dependent
  • Women also exhibit increase brain activation in some regions than do men, per fMRI analysis during sniff tests
  • additionally, periovulatory women and women who are in early pregnancy demonstrate enhanced sensitivity to smell
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14
Q

What are the sex differences in taste?

A
  • women display more sensitivity than men and have better discrimination of tastes
  • There are also sex differences in taste preferences in lab animals (females prefer sweet tastes like sugar)
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15
Q

What are the sex differences in audition?

A
  • Women are more sensitive than men to sound, hearing pure tones at lower thresholds than men (which is especially true at high frequencies) and occurs at all ages
  • women have louder otoacoustic emissions than men, a sex difference that is present from birth (faint echo-like emissions from cochlear are louder)
    – Women with CAH tend to have more masculine emissions: “quiet ears”
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16
Q

What are the sex differences in vision?

A
  • visual acuity is better in men than women, and men find visual information more rewarding than women (which starts in childhood)
  • Women tolerate high light intensities better than men, and are quicker to adapt to dark light
17
Q

What is lateralization? How is it different between sexes?

A

Lateralization: the tendency for cognitive skills to be concentrated in one hemisphere
- women are less lateralized than men–they tend to use both sides at once more than men do

18
Q

What are the sex differences in cognitive function?

A
  • Females are better: verbal tasks, perceptual skills, fine motor skills, mathematical calculations
  • males are better: targeted directed motor skills, quantitative tasks, and visuospatial abilities (including map reading, sense of direction and mathematical reasoning)
19
Q

What are the sex differences in mathematical reasoning?

A
  • males outperform females on math reasoning
  • this difference increases dramatically at the high end of performance
  • differences appear prior to puberty
  • Stereotype threat significantly affects scores in this area