The correlations are weak. Without additional information, you have no way of knowing whether the brain you're looking out is simply a particularly large woman's brain or a particularly small man's brain. The ranges overlap too much.
But you wouldn't just look at one characteristics. You would look at a number of the ways in which a male brain is hypothesised to differ from a female brain in order to make the determination.
The question is, if you took neuroimaging dumps from 100 brains, gave them to someone without anything that identifies the person and asked them to determine "male" or "female" and then check this against the sex as identified at the chromosomal level, would they match better than chance?
The evidence appears to be that, yes, they would match better than chance.
My own theory is that the brains of men and women are largely the same, and that the differences we observe in personalities, behavior and so on between men and women are largely due to differences in sex hormones.
Although scientists may not be able to find significant structural differences between male and female brains, they can easily find significant differences in hormones between men and women. The hormones affect personality. This is confirmed also by the experiences of people who take cross-sex hormones. Particularly female-to-male transitioners have reported significant differences in their feelings after they start to take testosterone.
I don't think it makes sense to talk about sex personality differences without considering the effect of hormones.
The weakness of the correlation between brain size and the male/female dichotomy places a limit on how well you can distinguish male from female by looking at nothing other than brain size, but it most definitely does not mean you cannot do better than chance.The correlations are weak.
As noted in my previous post, it is possible to quantify this.Without additional information, you have no way of knowing whether the brain you're looking out is simply a particularly large woman's brain or a particularly small man's brain. The ranges overlap too much.
No, and I didn't say it did. In fact I am pretty sure that I have earlier remarked that any physical differences in the brain that underlie differences in behaviour and personality would probably be much subtler than things like brain size.But that doesn't let us make the conclusion that differences in behaviour are tied to those differences.
No, and I didn't say it did. In fact I am pretty sure that I have earlier remarked that any physical differences in the brain that underlie differences in behaviour and personality would probably be much subtler than things like brain size.
The weakness of the correlation between brain size and the male/female dichotomy places a limit on how well you can distinguish male from female by looking at nothing other than brain size, but it most definitely does not mean you cannot do better than chance.
I think that women with men's legs follows directly from your argument for women with mens' brains.So you think that tall women are really men?
Playing dumb doesn't help your argument.Or are you saying that there is no average difference between the heights of men and woment?
If you think neither of these things then your point does not follow.
I am? News to me. Perhaps you have mixed me up with someone else.
So the idea that someone might be born in the wrong body is consistent with such scientific evidence as long as we understand it as someone having the brain characteristics that are usually associated with the people who have the opposite sexual characteristics.
In fact I was unaware that there needed to be any argument that there is, in fact, such a thing as a transgender person.
Do some people here think that they are just making it all up?
I predict: Nothing good can come of this thread.
This is true but I'll try too.Something good can come of this thread. Admittedly there is a significant chance that it won't.
The spoiler is for anyone who wants context but I'm interested in responding to the unspoiled bit. It would make humans rather special if genetic sexual dimorphism was only limited to physical characteristics and genetics had no impact on the behavioral sexual dimorphism.But that doesn't let us make the conclusion that differences in behaviour are tied to those differences.
This reminds me of the early 90s research which claimed to have found a difference between homosexual men's brains and heterosexual men's brains and said the homosexual male's brain in this area was more like a heterosexual female's brain. That study failed to note that there was as much a variance within the brains of heterosexual males as between homosexual male and heterosexual males. In other words the exact same type of issue we have here, yes there are "on average" differences but the "spectrum of difference" is as large among brains of the same sex as between the different sexed brains. (The study was also of a small number of brains and had other methodological weaknesses.)
What would be required before we even start making any causal claims would be for very large studies that somehow determined "femininity" and "masculinity" of people and then scanned their brains. We could then look to see if there was any correlation between the more "female" brains and people scoring higher on the "femininity" score. If there was then we could extend that to trans folk and see if trans folk also show this correlation, then we could very tentatively consider that a trans person's brain matched the sex they feel they are.
I thought we were talking about science deniers, who some guy in quillete says social justice advocates. I prefer progressives, its a broader category and not so close to the now pejorative SJW.No idea who these "progressives" are meant to be - I thought we were discussing the science?
I don't see how that follows, if there is a neural difference, what causes it? Possibly environment, possibly genetics, possibly the combination of both.But do you think that the behavioural and personality differences that exist on average between men and women are due to those things? That seems unlikely to me.
When people talk about "male brain" and "female brain" they are always talking about the hypothesised brain differences that underlie behavioral and personality differences observed between men and women.
So either there is some neural difference between men and women that underlies personality and behavioral differences and this is what we mean by "male brain" and "female brain", or else brains start more or less equal and the differences are due to culture and society in which case there is no such thing as a "male brain" and "female brain".
In neither case does the chromosomal difference you mention have any relevance.
Not so, as in my earlier example. You can construct the groups "adult" and "child" in any way you want, for example you can make the cut-off at 16 years of age or 18 years of age or any other cut off you like.
But you wouldn't just look at one characteristics. You would look at a number of the ways in which a male brain is hypothesised to differ from a female brain in order to make the determination.
The question is, if you took neuroimaging dumps from 100 brains, gave them to someone without anything that identifies the person and asked them to determine "male" or "female" and then check this against the sex as identified at the chromosomal level, would they match better than chance?
The evidence appears to be that, yes, they would match better than chance.
What would be required before we even start making any causal claims would be for very large studies that somehow determined "femininity" and "masculinity" of people and then scanned their brains. We could then look to see if there was any correlation between the more "female" brains and people scoring higher on the "femininity" score. If there was then we could extend that to trans folk and see if trans folk also show this correlation, then we could very tentatively consider that a trans person's brain matched the sex they feel they are.