Brain The brains of humans were long believed to be different for
males and
females. However, this has been called into question by recent developments in neuroscience. For example, studies published in 2018, 2019, and 2021, among others, have challenged the idea of sexual dimorphism regarding the brain, with one study concluding firmly that "brains are not meaningfully aligned along a male-female continuum." When the size of one's head is accounted for, brain differences between sexes are no longer clear, and they are not generalizable across geographic regions (i.e., what is considered a brain sex distinction in Europeans may not correlate to sex distinctions in Asian populations).
Brain size Early research into the differences between male and female brains showed that male brains are, on average, larger than female brains. This research was frequently cited to support the assertion that women are less intelligent than men. One of the most influential early researchers on this topic was
Paul Broca. In 1861, he examined 432 human brains from cadavers and found that the brains of males had an average weight of 1325 grams, while the brains of females had an average weight of 1144 grams. This study, however, did not control for differences in body size or age. Later studies have shown that while male's brains are an average of 10-15% larger and heavier than female's brains, there is relatively no difference when controlling for body weight. This means the brain-to-body mass ratio is, on average, approximately the same for both sexes.
Brain structure relative to
grey matter. Structural brain differences usually correspond to sexually dimorphic attributes that bring about functional brain differences. On average, female brains have a larger ratio of grey matter to the white matter than males (particularly in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and superior temporal gyrus), even when sex-differences in the total intracranial volume are taken into consideration. Most notably, males have a larger amount of white matter in the frontal and temporal
perisylvian region, and in the temporal stem and optic radiation, of the left hemisphere, whereas females have a larger amount of gray matter in the
superior temporal gyrus,
planum temporale,
Heschl gyrus,
cingulate gyrus,
inferior frontal, and
central sulci margins, of the left hemisphere. The degree of
hemispheric asymmetry in males corresponds to the relative size of
corpus callosum; however, this is not true in females. An increase in hemispheric asymmetry in male brains causes a male sex-dependent decrease in inter-hemispheric connectivity. Many studies suggest that, on average, female brains have more
commissural tracts involved in inter-hemispheric connectivity than males. Specifically, studies suggests that: • The
anterior commissure is larger in females than males. • The
massa intermedia is more abundant in females than males. • Females have a larger ratio of the cross-sectional area of the corpus callosum to cerebral volume and to forebrain size than males. Several studies have reached contrary conclusions. There are also differences in the structure of specific areas of the brain. On average, the
SDN has been repeatedly found to be considerably larger in males than in females. The volume of the SDN was 2.2 times as large in males as in females. On average, the
BSTc is twice as large in males as in females. On average, the
INAH-3 is significantly larger in males than in females regardless of age. Two studies found that men have larger
parietal lobes, an area responsible for sensory input including spatial sense and navigation; though, another study failed to find any statistically significant difference. At the same time, females have larger
Wernicke's and
Broca's areas, areas responsible for language processing. Studies using
MRI scanning have shown that the auditory and language-related regions in the left hemisphere are proportionally expanded in females versus in males. Conversely, the primary visual, and visuo-spatial association areas of the parietal lobes are proportionally larger in males. The corpus callous is located at the sagittal divide and is the primary
commissure in the human brain. It connects the left and right hemispheres of the cerebral cortex, which allows them to communicate with each other. With respect to language, males predominantly use their left hemisphere but females use both their right and left hemispheres. The right hemisphere controls emotion, so using the right hemisphere adds more prosody to speech. In males, the corpus callosum is larger than in females. However, the splenium and the isthmus subregions of the corpus callosum are larger in females. The genu subregion is larger in males. These subregions may serve as the basis for sex differences in language. However, a 1997 meta-study concluded that there is no relative size difference, and that the larger corpus callosum in males is due to generally larger brains in males on average; a small man and a large man would therefore have the same distinctions as the average man and the average woman. In total and on average, females have a higher percentage of
grey matter in comparison to males, and males a higher percentage of
white matter. However, some researchers maintain that as males have larger brains on average than females, when adjusted for total brain volume, the grey matter differences between sexes is small or nonexistent. Thus, the percentage of grey matter appears to be more related to brain size than it is to sex. In 2005, Haier
et al. reported that, compared with males, females show fewer grey matter areas associated with intelligence, but more white matter areas associated with intelligence. He concluded that "men and women apparently achieve similar IQ results with different brain regions, suggesting that there is no singular underlying neuroanatomical structure to general intelligence and that different types of brain designs may manifest equivalent intellectual performance." Using
brain mapping, it was shown that males have more than six times the amount of gray matter related to general intelligence than females, and females have nearly ten times the amount of white matter related to intelligence than males. They also report that the brain areas correlated with IQ differ between the sexes. In short, males and females apparently achieve similar IQ results with different brain regions. The
amygdala is a structure that generates emotional responses such as fear, anxiety, and anger. The male amygdala was originally believed to be proportionally larger than that in females, causing sex to be a determining factor in reactions to stress. However, newer studies have concluded this is not the case. When controlling for intracranial volume or total brain volume, there is no significant difference in amygdala size between the sexes. The
hippocampus, crucial for memory storage and spatial mapping of the physical environment, was likewise thought to be larger in females than in males. However, it is now believed to not be sexually dimorphic. A brain study done by the
NIH showed that the females had greater volume in the prefrontal cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, superior temporal cortex, lateral parietal cortex, and insula, whereas males had greater volume in the ventral temporal and occipital regions. == Sensory systems ==