Male and Female Ability Differences Down to Socialisation, Not Genetics

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Male and Female Ability Differences Down to Socialisation, Not Genetics Male and female ability differences down to socialisation, not genetics Behavioural differences between the sexes are not hard-wired at birth but are the result of society's expectations, say scientists Gender agenda: Mel Gibson in What Women Want. Photograph: Icon Film Distribution It is the mainstay of countless magazine and newspaper features. Differences between male and female abilities – from map reading to multi-tasking and from parking to expressing emotion – can be traced to variations in the hard-wiring of their brains at birth, it is claimed. Men instinctively like the colour blue and are bad at coping with pain, we are told, while women cannot tell jokes but are innately superior at empathising with other people. Key evolutionary differences separate the intellects of men and women and it is all down to our ancient hunter-gatherer genes that program our brains. The belief has become widespread, particularly in the wake of the publication of international bestsellers such as John Gray's Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus that stress the innate differences between the minds of men and women. But now a growing number of scientists are challenging the pseudo-science of "neurosexism", as they call it, and are raising concerns about its implications. These researchers argue that by telling parents that boys have poor chances of acquiring good verbal skills and girls have little prospect of developing mathematical prowess, serious and unjustified obstacles are being placed in the paths of children's education. In fact, there are no major neurological differences between the sexes, says Cordelia Fine in her book Delusions of Gender, which will be published by Icon next month. There may be slight variations in the brains of women and men, added Fine, a researcher at Melbourne University, but the wiring is soft, not hard. "It is flexible, malleable and changeable," she said. In short, our intellects are not prisoners of our genders or our genes and those who claim otherwise are merely coating old-fashioned stereotypes with a veneer of scientific credibility. It is a case backed by Lise Eliot, an associate professor based at the Chicago Medical School. "All the mounting evidence indicates these ideas about hard-wired differences between male and female brains are wrong," she told the Observer. "Yes, there are basic behavioural differences between the sexes, but we should note that these differences increase with age because our children's intellectual biases are being exaggerated and intensified by our gendered culture. Children don't inherit intellectual differences. They learn them. They are a result of what we expect a boy or a girl to be." Thus boys develop improved spatial skills not because of an innate superiority but because they are expected and are encouraged to be strong at sport, which requires expertise at catching and throwing. Similarly, it is anticipated that girls will be more emotional and talkative, and so their verbal skills are emphasised by teachers and parents. The latter example, on the issue of verbal skills, is particularly revealing, neuroscientists argue. Girls do begin to speak earlier than boys, by about a month on average, a fact that is seized upon by supporters of the Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus school of intellectual differences. However, this gap is really a tiny difference compared to the vast range of linguistic abilities that differentiate people, Robert Plomin, a professor at the Institute of Psychiatry in London, pointed out. His studies have found that a mere 3% of the variation in young children's verbal development is due to their gender. "If you map the distribution of scores for verbal skills of boys and of girls you get two graphs that overlap so much you would need a very fine pencil indeed to show the difference between them. Yet people ignore this huge similarity between boys and girls and instead exaggerate wildly the tiny difference between them. It drives me wild," Plomin told the Observer. This point is backed by Eliot. "Yes, boys and girls, men and women, are different," she states in a recent paper in New Scientist. "But most of those differences are far smaller than the Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus stereotypes suggest. "Nor are the reasoning, speaking, computing, emphasising, navigating and other cognitive differences fixed in the genetic architecture of our brains. "All such skills are learned and neuro-plasticity – the modifications of neurons and their connections in response experience – trumps hard-wiring every time." The current popular stress on innate intellectual differences between the sexes is, in part, a response to psychologists' emphasis of the environment's importance in the development of skills and personality in the 1970s and early 1980s, said Eliot. This led to a reaction against nurture as the principal factor in the development of human characteristics and to an exaggeration of the influence of genes and inherited abilities. This view is also popular because it propagates the status quo, she added. "We are being told there is nothing we can do to improve our potential because it is innate. That is wrong. Boys can develop powerful linguistic skills and girls can acquire deep spatial skills." In short, women can read maps despite claims that they lack the spatial skills for such efforts, while men can learn to empathise and need not be isolated like Mel Gibson's Nick Marshall, the emotionally retarded male lead of the film What Women Want and a classic stereotype of the unfeeling male that is perpetuated by the supporters of the hard-wired school of intellectual differences. This point was also stressed by Fine. "Many of the studies that claim to highlight differences between the brains of males and females are spurious. They are based on tests carried out on only a small number of individuals and their results are often not repeated by other scientists. However, their results are published and are accepted by teachers and others as proof of basic differences between boys and girls. "All sorts of ridiculous conclusions about very important issues are then made. Already sexism disguised in neuroscientific finery is changing the way children are taught." So should we abandon our search for the "real" differences between the sexes and give up this "pernicious pinkification of little girls", as one scientist has put it? Yes, we should, Eliot insisted. "There is almost nothing we do with our brains that is hard- wired. Every skill, attribute and personality trait is moulded by experience." URL: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/aug/15/girls-boys-think-same-way .
Recommended publications
  • Non-Binary Or Genderqueer Genders
    International Review of Psychiatry ISSN: 0954-0261 (Print) 1369-1627 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/iirp20 Non-binary or genderqueer genders Christina Richards, Walter Pierre Bouman, Leighton Seal, Meg John Barker, Timo O. Nieder & Guy T’Sjoen To cite this article: Christina Richards, Walter Pierre Bouman, Leighton Seal, Meg John Barker, Timo O. Nieder & Guy T’Sjoen (2016) Non-binary or genderqueer genders, International Review of Psychiatry, 28:1, 95-102, DOI: 10.3109/09540261.2015.1106446 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/09540261.2015.1106446 Published online: 12 Jan 2016. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 174 View related articles View Crossmark data Citing articles: 1 View citing articles Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=iirp20 Download by: [212.200.65.127] Date: 18 February 2016, At: 12:21 INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF PSYCHIATRY, 2016 VOL. 28, NO. 1, 95–102 http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/09540261.2015.1106446 REVIEW ARTICLE Non-binary or genderqueer genders Christina Richardsa,b, Walter Pierre Boumana, Leighton Sealb, Meg John Barkerc, Timo O. Niederd and Guy T’Sjoene aNottingham Centre for Gender Dysphoria, Nottingham, UK; bCharing Cross Gender Identity Clinic, London, UK; cDepartment of Psychology in Social Sciences, Open University, Milton Keynes, UK; dInterdisciplinary Transgender Health Care Centre Hamburg, Department for Sex Research and Forensic Psychiatry, University Medical Centre Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE), Germany; eCentre for Sexology and Gender, Department of Endocrinology, Ghent University, Belgium ABSTRACT ARTICLE HISTORY Some people have a gender which is neither male nor female and may identify as both male and Received 29 June 2015 female at one time, as different genders at different times, as no gender at all, or dispute the very Accepted 6 October 2015 idea of only two genders.
    [Show full text]
  • Neuroscience and Sex/Gender
    Neuroethics (2012) 5:211–215 DOI 10.1007/s12152-012-9165-5 EDITORIAL NOTE Neuroscience and Sex/Gender Isabelle Dussauge & Anelis Kaiser Received: 4 September 2012 /Accepted: 13 September 2012 /Published online: 2 October 2012 # Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2012 This special issue publishes interdisciplinary scholar- hosts very different epistemological approaches, a ship which aims to map and re-imagine the relations common knowledge of neuroscience and gender between neuroscience and gender studies. studies was a prerequisite for the group’stheoret- ical and methodological exchange. The participants lively debated crucial issues, from current research neuroGenderings: The Network on sex/gender difference in neuropsychology, through the implications of notions of sex/gender, The authors of the present special issue were all par- gender identity and sexuality used in neuroscien- ticipants in the workshop neuroGenderings: Critical tific experimentation, to the social workings of a Studies of the Sexed Brain (Uppsala, 2010). Then co- sexed/gendered brain. organizers, now guest editors, we work in gender More precisely, the neuroGenderings workshop studies, neuroscience, and science and technology achieved an impressive first mapping of the research studies. In 2010, we did not know for a fact that the on sex/gender in neurosciences and the methodological neuroGenderings initiative would grow and develop frames used in those sciences. We discussed, for in- into an international network and conference series. stance, the role assigned to “sexed” regions of the brain, Now we know. by analyzing the relevance of the notion of sexual di- In neuroGenderings, a transdisciplinary and inter- morphism, itself a system of significance that is always national group of researchers from the neurosciences, and solely framed by neuro-logical sexual dichotomy.
    [Show full text]
  • Debating Sex Differences in Cognition: We Can Do Better What I Learnt Teaching Cordelia Fine’S “Delusions of Gender”
    Debating sex differences in cognition: we can do better What I learnt teaching Cordelia Fine’s “Delusions of Gender” Tom Stafford, @tomstafford University of Sheffield The graduate class PSY6316 ‘Current Issues in Cognitive Neuroscience’. MSc course, ~15 people. Stafford, T. (2008), A fire to be lighted: a case-study in enquiry-based learning, Practice and Evidence of Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, Vol. 3, No. 1, April 2008, pp.20-42. “There are sex differences in the brain” Fine (Delusions, Introduction, p xxvii) “Anti-sex difference” investigators? Cahill (2014) http://www.dana.org/Cerebrum/2014/Equal_%E2%89%A0_The_Same__Sex_Differences_in_the_Hu man_Brain/ https://whyevolutionistrue.wordpress.com/2017/01/20/are-male-and-female-brains-absolutely-identical/ Sarah Ditum, The Guardian, 18th January 2017 Not what Fine thinks. Not what Ditum thinks. Headline chosen by subeditor Original: http://web.archive.org/web/20170118081437/www.theguardian.com/books/2017/jan/18/testosterone- rex-review-cordelia-fine Current: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/jan/18/testosterone-rex-review-cordelia-fine We can do better We can quantify the size of differences Interpreting Cohen's d effect size an interactive visualization by Kristoffer Magnusson http://rpsychologist.com/d3/cohend/ Sex differences in cognition are small https://mindhacks.com/2017/02/14/sex-differences-in-cognition-are-small/ The Gender similarities hypothesis “The differences model, which argues that males and females are vastly different psychologically, dominates the popular media. Here, the author advances a very different view, the gender similarities hypothesis, which holds that males and females are similar on most, but not all, psychological variables” Hyde, J.
    [Show full text]
  • Women, Cycling, and the Public Sphere: How Discursive and Community Practices Affect Engagement
    Michigan Technological University Digital Commons @ Michigan Tech Dissertations, Master's Theses and Master's Dissertations, Master's Theses and Master's Reports - Open Reports 2015 WOMEN, CYCLING, AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE: HOW DISCURSIVE AND COMMUNITY PRACTICES AFFECT ENGAGEMENT Elsa L. Roberts Michigan Technological University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/etds Part of the Linguistics Commons, and the Women's Studies Commons Copyright 2015 Elsa L. Roberts Recommended Citation Roberts, Elsa L., "WOMEN, CYCLING, AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE: HOW DISCURSIVE AND COMMUNITY PRACTICES AFFECT ENGAGEMENT", Master's Thesis, Michigan Technological University, 2015. https://doi.org/10.37099/mtu.dc.etds/915 Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/etds Part of the Linguistics Commons, and the Women's Studies Commons WOMEN, CYCLING, AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE: HOW DISCURSIVE AND COMMUNITY PRACTICES AFFECT ENGAGEMENT By Elsa L. Roberts A THESIS Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE In Rhetoric and Technical Communication MICHIGAN TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY 2015 © 2015 Elsa L. Roberts This thesis has been approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE in Rhetoric and Technical Communication. Department of Humanities Thesis Advisor: Victoria L. Bergvall Committee Member: Lauren M. Bowen Committee Member: M. Ann Brady Committee Member: Donald J. Lafreniere Department Chair: Ronald Strickland To my grandmother, who believed in me when no one else did. To my partner and best friend, who has been by my side since I was 18. And to my other best friend who is the Jake to my Finn, together we inhabit the struggle.
    [Show full text]
  • Delusions of Gender: How Our Minds, Society, and Neurosexism Create Difference. by CORDELIA FINE. New York: W. W. Norton Comp
    INVITED REVIEW ESSAY Delusions of Gender: How Our Minds, Society, and Neurosexism Create Difference. By CORDELIA FINE. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2010. Brain Storm: The Flaws in the Science of Sex Differences.ByREBECCAM. JORDAN-YOUNG. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2010. Letitia Meynell “…we’re only trying to find the biological roots to gender inequality, so why be fussy, right?” (Fine, 108). That the search for dimorphic cognitive, affective, and behavioral sex differences con- tinues is no doubt a source of anxiety for those who have long embraced a feminist or progressive ideal of equality for all postnatal humans, regardless of their sex/gender (or other) identities. Indeed, the prevalence of media reports and best-selling accounts of scientific findings of fundamental neurological, psychological, and behavioral sex dif- ferences, in addition to the studies themselves, may give the most ardent feminists among us occasion to suspect that there might just be something to it: Putting aside the many queer, trans, and intersexed exceptions—for which some biological explana- tion must also, presumably, exist—a rational consideration of the mountain of evi- dence surely suggests that our natural history really has produced two fundamentally different types of people: men and women. Or so one might suppose. Feminists strug- gling with this haunting doubt would do well to take a look at Cordelia Fine’s Delu- sions of Gender: How Our Minds, Society, and Neurosexism Create Difference and Rebecca Jordan-Young’s Brain Storm: The Flaws in the Science of Sex Differences as effective remedies. These recent books join a now extensive literature by feminist aca- demics, both within and outside the biological and mind sciences, that meticulously and critically dissect empirical claims about human sex differences as they pertain to cognition, emotions, and behavior.
    [Show full text]
  • NATURE and NURTURE • Coolnotcute.Com NATURE and NURTURE Boys Will Be Boys
    NATURE and NURTURE • coolnotcute.com NATURE and NURTURE Boys will be Boys This is the second of three essays relating to a female bias in picture book content. The first essay, COOL not CUTE, examines the origins of this bias and how it manifests itself. The third essay, FIGHTERS and FASHIONISTAS, addresses gender-stereotyping. This essay is intended to be read between the other two. All three essays can be found at coolnotcute.com In this essay I’m going to examine some of the scientific research that relates to the argument I’ve made about the female bias in picture book content in COOL not CUTE. I’ll be focussing on the work of psychologists Melissa Hines1, Simon Baron-Cohen2 and Richard E. Tremblay3 in particular. Although I have a keen interest in psychology, I’m obviously not an expert, so I’ve asked psychologist Claire Lawrence4, a friend of mine, to proof the science of this essay. While I’ve included some of Claire’s comments, it should be assumed that the opinions expressed are my own, unless otherwise stated. As I mentioned in COOL not CUTE, when I refer to boy-typical or girl-typical preferences, I’m making a generalised argument. Girls with boy-typical preferences and boys with girl-typical preferences need books that appeal to them just as much as any other child. I’m aware that even labelling preferences as “boy-typical” and “girl-typical” will raise concerns with some readers about conditioning children to conform to sexual stereotypes. These are important concerns and I’ve addressed them in a separate essay, FIGHTERS and FASHIONISTAS.
    [Show full text]
  • Delusions of Gender HIB Autumn 2015
    Delusions of Gender HIB Autumn 2015 Number of characters: 94950 Group 2 Anne Cecilie Overgaard Sara Albu Arabi Saskia van Dam Joensen Simone Barnekow Nielsen Supervisor: Patrick Blackburn Abstract: This project strives to examine how gender is established in children. Throughout the project, we have taken into consideration what roles society and biological determinism play in the establishment of gender. Furthermore, the project examines how gender performativity and societal influence can help us get a better picture of the gender establishment. The paper is written as a philosophical discussion with a point of departure in experimental psychologist Cordelia Fine’s book ‘Delusions of Gender’, with theoretical notions of philosopher Judith Butler, mainly from her book ‘Gender Trouble’. The paper finds that there are multiple ways of viewing this topic, as the conclusion depends on personal experiences, theoretical background and field of study. Adding to this examination of how gender is established in children, we have added a case named the Joan/John case to be able to add the notions from the paper to a real life situation. 1 Table of Content 1 Introduction: ....................................................................................................................... 4 1.1 Problem Definition ....................................................................................................... 5 1.2 Research Questions .................................................................................................... 5 1.3
    [Show full text]
  • The Biology of Sex and Gender
    CHAPTER 1 THE BIOLOGY OF SEX AND GENDER When do we first become aware of gender? Is it when certain clothing or toys are given to us to match a culturally-specific model of how a child should look and play? Is it when we see genitals other than our own and are forced to compare and contrast? Or maybe the first time we truly process the idea of gender occurs when checking off a box to identify ourselves, almost invariably as either “male” or “female”. Neurobiologists often suggest that the formation of gender identity starts much earlier than any of these events. Some say that gender is simply em - bedded in our genes. Oth - ers believe that the SEX VS. GENDER: introduction of particular A BASIC GLOSSARY hormones in the womb One’s “sex” refers to the physical attributes that shape how we will emerge. distinguish between typical male, female and in - It is commonly held that the tersex people. “Gender,” on the other hand, number of X vs. Y chromo - refers to the behaviors, activities, roles and ac - somes an individual has in tions that are socially attributed to boys, girls, their cells provides the men, women , and transgender people in a given basic determination of an individual’s sex. And yet, society. Descriptions of genders and gender few contest that chromo - roles differ in each culture, and many people’s somes fall quite shy of ex - gender (or genders) do not match the socially- plaining the roles and designated attributes of the sex that they are as - patterns of behavior that signed at birth.
    [Show full text]
  • Feminist Encounters with Evolutionary Psychology
    This is a repository copy of Feminist Encounters with Evolutionary Psychology. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/117027/ Version: Accepted Version Article: O'Neill, Rachel (2016) Feminist Encounters with Evolutionary Psychology. Australian Feminist Studies. pp. 345-350. https://doi.org/10.1080/08164649.2016.1157909 Reuse Items deposited in White Rose Research Online are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved unless indicated otherwise. They may be downloaded and/or printed for private study, or other acts as permitted by national copyright laws. The publisher or other rights holders may allow further reproduction and re-use of the full text version. This is indicated by the licence information on the White Rose Research Online record for the item. Takedown If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing [email protected] including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request. [email protected] https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/ Australian Feminist Studies Rachel O’Neill Feminist Encounters with Evolutionary Psychology Introduction Rachel O’Neill This Section of Australian Feminist Studies is the product of an event that took place at King’s College London in January 2015, hosted as part of the UK-based ‘Critical Sexology’ seminar series. Participants at this event – feminist scholars working across the fields of lin- guistics, cultural studies, sociology, and psychology – were invited to reflect on their encounters with evolutionary psychology (EP). As the event organiser, I was interested to prompt a discussion about how EP shapes the contours of contemporary feminist scholarship, insofar as arguments from EP are something feminist scholars continually find ourselves coming across and coming up against both within and outside the academy.
    [Show full text]
  • Delusions of Gender
    Praise for A Mind of Its Own ‘We are all vain bigots, thanks to the foibles of the human brain, so argues Fine in her witty survey of psychology experiments … An ideal gift for anyone interested in psychology’ Focus ‘Clear, accessible writing makes her a science writer to watch.’ Metro ‘Filled with quotable stories and interactive ways of how our brain has a buoyant ego of its own and is not the objective tool we might like to believe’ Bookseller ‘A light and amusing introduction to the brain and how it works on our perceptions and actions’ Publishing News ‘Consistently well-written and meticulously researched … [Fine’s] touching vignettes about life with her young son and her rational but tender husband suggest the buried presence of someone who could in the future rewardingly illuminate the workings of the mind with the studied casualness of the gifted novelist.’ Alain de Botton, Sunday Times ‘In breezy demotic, Fine offers an entertaining tour of current thinking … [she] is especially fascinating on the blurring of the line between pathological delusions and the normal deluded brain.’ Telegraph ‘Fine, with a sharp sense of humour and an intelligent sense of reality, slaps an Asbo on the hundred billion grey cells that – literally – have shifty, ruthless, self-serving minds of their own.’ The Times ‘Fine’s style is chirpy … [with] many affectionately amusing scenes.’ Guardian ‘Engaging, intelligent’ Scotland on Sunday ‘Fine’s flair for the humorous and anecdotal makes this a delightful read.’ Irish Times ‘Fine sets out to demonstrate that the human brain is vainglorious and stubborn.
    [Show full text]
  • Genderqueer and Non-Binary Genders
    Critical and Applied Approaches in Sexuality, Gender and Identity Series Editor: Christina Richards GENDERQUEER AND NON-BINARY GENDERS Edited by Christina Richards Walter Pierre Bouman Meg-John Barker Critical and Applied Approaches in Sexuality, Gender and Identity Behavioral Science and Psychology Series editor Christina Richards London, United Kingdom This series brings together scholars from a range of disciplines who have produced work which both informs the academy and, crucially, has real-world applied implications for a variety of different professions, including psychologists; psychiatrists; psychotherapists; counsellors; medical doctors; nurses; social workers; researchers and lecturers; gov- ernmental policy advisors; non-governmental policy advisors; and peer support workers, among others. The series critically considers intersec- tions between sexuality and gender; practice and identity; and theoreti- cal and applied arenas – as well as questioning, where appropriate, the nature or reality of the boundaries between them. In short, it aims to build castles in the sky we can live in – after all the view is nothing, without a place to stand. More information about this series at http://www.palgrave.com/series/15443 Christina Richards Walter Pierre Bouman Meg-John Barker Editors Genderqueer and Non-Binary Genders Editors Christina Richards Walter Pierre Bouman Nottingham Center for Transgender Health Nottingham Center for Transgender Health Nottingham, United Kingdom Nottingham, United Kingdom Meg-John Barker Psychology in the Social Sciences The Open University Psychology in the Social Sciences Milton Keynes, United Kingdom Critical and Applied Approaches in Sexuality, Gender and Identity ISBN 978-1-137-51052-5 ISBN 978-1-137-51053-2 (eBook) DOI 10.1057/978-1-137-51053-2 Library of Congress Control Number: 2017949533 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2017 The author(s) has/have asserted their right(s) to be identified as the author(s) of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
    [Show full text]
  • 8-10 May 2014, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
    CALL FOR PAPERS Institut des sciences sociales www.unil.ch/neurogenderings3 Laboratoire de sociolgie NEUROGENDERINGS III THE 1ST INTERNATIONAL DISSENSUS CONFERENCE ON BRAIN AND GENDER 8-10 May 2014, University of Lausanne, Switzerland THE NEUROGENDERINGS NETWORK In 2010, the conference NeuroGenderings: Critical Studies of the Sexed Brain was held in Uppsala (Sweden). It brought together experts from different disciplines to identify theoretical and methodological strategies for social scientists, cultural scientists and neuroscientists to engage with radical, intersectional feminist and queer studies of the brain. Two years later, NeuroCultures — NeuroGenderings II was organized in 2012 in Vienna in order to continue the critical engagement with neuroscience and particularly to address processes of gendering in today’s rapidly emerging “neurocultures.” Behind these international and transdisciplinary meetings lies NeuroGenderings (NG), a network which aims to elaborate innovative theoretical and empirical approaches for questions of sex/gender and sexuality for neuroscientists; to analyze the social and political underpinnings of the ongoing “cerebralization” of human life and especially of sex/gender, and to discuss the impacts of neuroscientific sex/gender research in sociopolitical and cultural fields. Some of these approaches can already be found in [2] and [24]. In cooperation with the network NeuroGenderings, the Laboratory of Sociology (LabSo) and the Institute of Social Sciences at the University of Lausanne will host a three-day conference entitled “NeuroGenderings III – The 1st international Dissensus Conference on brain and gender,” 8-10 May 2014. We encourage submissions from scholars and students from all domains in the humanities, in the social, biological and medical sciences, including clinical practice, to discuss current developments — and alternatives to the existing research trends, models and practices— in the areas of brain, sex/gender and sexuality.
    [Show full text]