Article

Are sex differences in human brain structure associated with sex differences in behavior?

Details

Citation

van Eijk L, Zhu D, Couvy-Duchesne B, Strike LT, Lee A, Hansell NK, Thompson PM, de Zubicaray GI, McMahon KL, Wright MJ & Zietsch BP (2021) Are sex differences in human brain structure associated with sex differences in behavior?. Psychological Science, 32 (8), pp. 1183-1197. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797621996664

Abstract
On average, men and women differ in brain structure and behaviour, raising the possibility of a link between sex differences in brain and behaviour. But women and men are also subject to different societal and cultural norms. We navigated this challenge by investigating variability of sex-differentiated brain structure within each sex. Using data from the Queensland Twin IMaging study (N=1,040) and Human Connectome Project (N=1,113), we obtained data-driven measures of individual differences along a male-female dimension for brain and behaviour based on average sex differences in brain structure and behaviour, respectively. We found a weak association between these brain and behavioural differences, driven by brain size. These brain and behavioural differences were moderately heritable. Our findings suggest that behavioural sex differences are to some extent related to sex differences in brain structure, but that this is mainly driven by differences in brain size, and causality should be interpreted cautiously.

Keywords
masculinization; brain structure; neuroimaging; MRI; twin modelling

Journal
Psychological Science: Volume 32, Issue 8

StatusPublished
FundersNational Health and Medical Research Council and National Institute for Health Research
Publication date31/08/2021
Publication date online29/07/2021
Date accepted by journal13/12/2020
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/32570
ISSN0956-7976
eISSN1467-9280

People (1)

Dr Anthony Lee

Dr Anthony Lee

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology

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