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Van Exel, E., Gussekloo, J., De Craen, A.J.M., Bootsma-van Der Wiel, A., Houx, P., Knook, D.L. and Westendorp, R.G.J. (2001) Cognitive Function in the Oldest Old: Women Perform Better than Men. Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 71, 29-32.
https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.71.1.29
has been cited by the following article:
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TITLE:
Statistical Analysis on Gender Difference in Neural Activity for Spatial Ability Tasks
AUTHORS:
Sung-Ho Kim, Namgil Lee, Chang-Hyun Park
KEYWORDS:
Cross-Correlation, Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Co-Activation and Reverse-Activation, Between and Within Hemisphere
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Biophysics,
Vol.13 No.1,
November
10,
2022
ABSTRACT: Gender differences are investigated from the viewpoint of cognitive neuroscience in the domain of spatial ability. Five task types of geometric problems are used for the collection of task-evoked fMRI data. Although there was no gender-difference in task performance, we found gender differences in neural activity. Some of the important gender differences that we found are 1) that there are far more joint neuro-activations among the brain regions, co-activations or reverse-activations, in males than in females, 2) that the two types of joint activations were nearly half and half in females while it was mostly co-activations in males, 3) that males tend to have more co-activations in the left hemisphere than expected while females tend to have more between-hemisphere co-activations than expected, and 4) that the left-right pairs of BA's are more highly associated than average for males while they are far less associated than average for females.