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Sex and intelligence research investigates differences in the distributions of cognitive skills between men and women. This research employs experimental tests of cognitive ability, which take a variety of forms, including written tests like the SAT. Research focuses on differences in individual skills as well as overall differences in general cognitive ability, which is often called g. IQ tests, specially designed to measure cognitive ability, usually test a variety of skills, and IQ scores are often used as a measure of g. For other uses, see SAT (disambiguation). ...
The general intelligence factor (abbreviated g) is a controversial construct used in the field of psychology (see also psychometrics) to quantify what is common to the scores of all intelligence tests. ...
IQ redirects here. ...
The populations of men and women differ on average in how well they perform on some of these skill tests, but do equally well on other tests. For example, women tend to score higher on certain verbal and memory tests, whereas men tend to score higher on spatial and mathematical tests. While these results are relatively uncontroversial, the question of whether men and women differ on average in g is a matter of debate among experts. Most recent studies unambiguously find that men as a population are more varied than women in g (i.e. they have a slightly higher variance and therefore there are slighly more men than women at the extremes of ability). This article is about mathematics. ...
Determining whether men and women differ on average has been more difficult. It is easy to design an IQ test in which either males or females score higher on average, by selecting different tests or giving them different weights, so the question boils down to which weights the different tests should have for the g factor. For example, when the Stanford-Binet test was revised in the 1940's, preliminary tests yielded a slightly higher average IQ for women, a discrepancy attributed to a greater than usual emphasis on verbal ability. The test was subsequently adjusted to give identical averages for men and women.[1] The modern field of intelligence testing began with the Stanford-Binet IQ test. ...
History
The scientific study of the differences in mental aptitudes between men and women dates back at least as far as the mid-nineteenth century, when the question of women's voting rights arose in a number of countries. In Victorian England, for example, the philosopher John Stuart Mill argued that there were no differences between men and women, whereas the scientist Charles Darwin (in his Descent of Man) argued that women were by their nature inferior in respect to mental ability. Many of these early attempts were based on anecdotal data. However, some scientists, such as Paul Broca (1861), attempted to derive empirical results from various forms of anthropometry, namely the comparison of brain mass. Voting rights refers to the right of a person to vote in an election. ...
redirect Victorian eramonkey ...
John Stuart Mill (20 May 1806 â 8 May 1873), British philosopher, political economist, civil servant and Member of Parliament, was an influential liberal thinker of the 19th century. ...
For other people of the same surname, and places and things named after Charles Darwin, see Darwin. ...
The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex by British naturalist Charles Darwin was first published in 1871. ...
Paul Pierre Broca (June 28, 1824 - July 9, 1880) was a French physician, anatomist and anthropologist. ...
Illustration from The Speaking Portrait (Pearsons Magazine, Vol XI, January to June 1901) demonstrating the principles of Bertillons anthropometry. ...
Human brain In animals, the brain (enkephale) (Greek for in the skull), is the control center of the central nervous system, responsible for behavior. ...
This discussion has provoked controversy at various times, often because political implications were perceived to be attached to them. In the nineteenth century, as noted, whether men and women had equal intelligence was seen by many as a prerequisite for the granting of suffrage. Leta Hollingworth argues that: Women were not permitted to realize their full potential, as they were confined to the roles of child rearing and housekeeping. Leta Stetter Hollingworth was born in Nebraska on May 25, 1886. ...
With the development of psychology at the end of the nineteenth century, and the evolving focus on intelligence testing in the early twentieth century, further attempts were made by a variety of scientists to examine the mental differences between men and women. British psychologist Cyril Burt proposed in 1912 that there was no sex differences in overall general intelligence, basing his conclusions on the results from a series of reasoning tasks he developed and administered to both boys and girls in various secondary schools in Liverpool.[2] Psychological science redirects here. ...
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Sir Cyril Lodowic Burt (March 3, 1883 â October 10, 1971) was a prominent British educational psychologist. ...
From the late twentieth century onwards, sex differences in intelligence have been discussed to determine whether disproportionate employment or payment favouring men is a manifestation of sexism or simply a reflection of innate aptitudes.[3] Manifestations Slavery Racial profiling Lynching Hate speech Hate crime Genocide (examples) Ethnocide Ethnic cleansing Pogrom Race war Religious persecution Gay bashing Blood libel Paternalism Police brutality Movements Policies Discriminatory Race / Religion / Sex segregation Apartheid Redlining Internment Anti-discriminatory Emancipation Civil rights Desegregation Integration Equal opportunity Counter-discriminatory Affirmative action Racial...
SAT scores
Average SAT scores (recentered) by sex, 1972 - 2003. Source: [1], Table A The SAT is a voluntary, standardised test taken by many American college applicants. It is administered by the Educational Testing Service, which keeps track of the gender of test-takers and releases SAT scores by gender. In 2001, men scored 533 while women scored 498 overall; men also scored 509 out of 800 on the verbal portion while women scored 502 out of 800. The difference, however, was more pronounced and consistent on the math segment of the SAT. These discrepancies reflect gender differences in scores since the first implementation of the SAT (see table.) Image File history File links SAT_by_sex. ...
Image File history File links SAT_by_sex. ...
For other uses, see SAT (disambiguation). ...
For other uses, see SAT (disambiguation). ...
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
Jackson and Rushton extracted a g factor from 145 items on the 1991 SAT, using responses from 46,509 males and 56,007 females.[4] Their study findings showed that 17- to 18-year old males averaged 3.63 IQ points higher than did their female counterparts, and that the differences become more evident with increasing age. They postulated that this was caused by the relative inactivity of women with advancing age. Rosser (1989) claimed that there were four potential areas for sex bias through testing[5]: - Test questions refer to more men than women, and women are shown in situations of lower status.
- Test questions refer to contexts more familiar to men.
- Test validity under-predicts women's academic capabilities and over-predicts men's.
- Tests that under-predict women's capabilities are used to restrict their educational opportunities.
Following concerns about the persistent gender disparity in SAT scores, a newly-designed SAT was implemented as of 2005 which placed much greater emphasis on writing abilities; areas in which women have historically shown greater strength. The figures in 2006 show an average score of 536 for males and 502 for females in mathematics, 505 for males and 502 for females in critical reading. [2] As with any standardized test, there will always be general speculation as to the accuracy of SAT scores in predicting one's general cognitive ability. The most commonly cited discrepancy is the occasional tendency for adept test takers to score very highly, while failing to demonstrate a corresponding high academic aptitude in other areas. Conversely, those who fare poorly in standardized testing commonly achieve high marks in other modalities of grading, evidence which might suggest the prescient purpose of standardized testing is decreasing. An alternative explanation is that subjective or biased grading by teachers at secondary and collegiate institutions may contrast with more objective scores retrieved through the identity-blind automated process employed by the SAT.
IQ tests Recent large representative studies have shown inconsistent results in comparing the overall IQ performances of men and women. Some describe minimal differences,[6][7] whereas others have demonstrated statistically significant disparities favouring men[8][9][10]. What they illustrate consistently, however, is greater variance in the performance of men compared to that of women (ie. men are more represented at the extremes of performance), and that men and women have statistically significant differences in average scores on tests of particular abilities, which even out when the overall IQ scores are weighted. This article is about mathematics. ...
Variance in IQ In 1995, a meta-analysis of national ability surveys over a 32 year period, conducted by Hedges and Nowell, demonstrated significantly greater variance among men compared to women in most skilled tasks and executive abilities. More recently, Deary et al. (2003) performed an analysis of an IQ test administered to almost all children in Scotland at age 11 in 1932 (>80,000).[11] The average IQ scores by sex were 162.69 for girls and 163.36 for boys. The difference in mean IQ was not significant. However, the standard deviation was 14.1 for girls and 14.9 for boys, a difference which was statistically significant. Because of the difference in variance between the sexes, however, girls are in excess by 2% in the middle IQ range of 90–115. At the extreme IQ ranges, 50–60 and 130–140, boys make up 58.6% and 57.7% of the population (gaps of 17.2% and 15.4%) respectively. That is, boys were overrepresented amongst the lowest and highest IQ groups. It is generally observed that males tend to hit the most positive and negative performance results of many tests. An extensive study published by the British Journal of Psychology in 2005 used research based on IQ tests given to 80,000 people and a further study of 20,000 students.[12] It demonstrated that men on average scored five points ahead on IQ tests, a difference which remained statistically significant despite the study design accommodating for gender-specific abilities. The study also found a much higher proportion of men in the higher IQ brackets. "There are 3 men to each woman with an IQ above 130 and 5.5 men for each woman with an IQ above 145" according to Dr Paul Irwing, the paper's lead researcher. He goes on to say: "These different proportions of men and women with high IQ scores may go some way to explaining the greater numbers of men achieving distinctions of various kinds, such as chess grandmasters, Fields medallists for mathematics, Nobel prizewinners and the like." [3] Consistent with this finding, men have been shown to predominate in many high IQ societies. In Mensa the male-to-female ratio is approximately 2:1, based on US demographic data in 2008. [4] There are multiple pages related to Mensa. Mensa International is an organization for persons with high IQs. ...
Specific abilities - Verbal/mathematical ability: Hedges and Nowell (1995) demonstrated strong average advantages for men in math and science and typically male vocations, and moderate to strong average advantages to women in reading. This trend was also found in a 2001 report by Richard J. Cooley of the ETS.
- Spatial tasks/memory: Men have been shown to outperform women in abilities that require spatial awareness such as navigation, map reading and target-directed motor skills, whereas women show greater proficiency and reliance on landmarking for memory skills. [13]
- General knowledge: A study by Richard Lynn suggests that men show greater ability than women in maintaining broad general knowledge[14]
- Education: In the United States and Great Britain, women outnumber men at colleges and universities, except at technical institutions which emphasise mathematics and science such as MIT and Caltech, where men predominate. An analysis of 2007 figures by Universities UK shows that, even given this overall imbalance, men continue to achieve a significantly greater proportion of first class degrees than their female counterparts.
- Academia: Men outnumber women in tenured faculty positions in mathematics and science, and women outnumber men in tenured faculty positions in humanities fields.[citation needed]
Mapúa Institute of Technology (MIT, MapúaTech or simply Mapúa) is a private, non-sectarian, Filipino tertiary institute located in Intramuros, Manila. ...
California Institute of Technology The California Institute of Technology (commonly known as Caltech) is a private, coeducational university located in Pasadena, California, in the United States. ...
Universities UK began life as the Committee of Vice-Chancellors and Principals of the Universities of the United Kingdom (CVCP) in the nineteenth century when there were informal meetings involving Vice-Chancellors of a number of universities and Principals of university colleges. ...
Controversy In July 2006, Stanford University neurobiologist Ben Barres, a transsexual man, wrote a provocative piece in Nature on his own experiences as both a male and female scientist.[15] Barres argued that prior to transition, he had succeeded as a female despite pervasive sexism. Barres wrote that numerous studies show female scientists are consistently rated lower than their male counterparts with the same levels of productivity and credentials. Neuroscience is a field of study which deals with the structure, function, development, genetics, biochemistry, physiology, pharmacology and pathology of the nervous system. ...
Ben A. Barres M.D., Ph. ...
Transmen or trans men are transgender or transsexual people who were assigned female gender at birth (or, in cases of intersexuality, later) and who feel that this is not an accurate or complete description of themselves. ...
Nature is a prominent scientific journal, first published on 4 November 1869. ...
Manifestations Slavery Racial profiling Lynching Hate speech Hate crime Genocide (examples) Ethnocide Ethnic cleansing Pogrom Race war Religious persecution Gay bashing Blood libel Paternalism Police brutality Movements Policies Discriminatory Race / Religion / Sex segregation Apartheid Redlining Internment Anti-discriminatory Emancipation Civil rights Desegregation Integration Equal opportunity Counter-discriminatory Affirmative action Racial...
It is possible that sexual dimorphism may exist in regard to intellectual abilities in humans. Men may have evolved greater spatial abilities, possibly as a result of certain behaviors, such as navigating during a hunt, that they were more likely to be involved in during humans' evolutionary history.[16] Similarly, women may have evolved to devote more mental resources to gathering food, as well as understanding and tracking relationships and reading others' emotional states in order for them to be able to better understand their social situation.[16] Female (left) and male Common Pheasant, illustrating the dramatic difference in both color and size, between the sexes Sexual dimorphism is the systematic difference in form between individuals of different sex in the same species. ...
Another possibility is the effects of socialization. Girls are sometimes discouraged from studying math or science. Similarly, boys are sometimes discouraged from displaying empathy, or from spending excessive time reading for pleasure[citation needed]. A family posing for a group photo socializes together. ...
According to Diane F. Halpern, the above two hypotheses are not mutually exclusive; some combination of the two may be at work. She wrote in the preface of her 2000 book Sex Differences In Cognitive Abilities: Diane F. Halpern is an American psychologist and past-president of the American Psychological Association (APA). ...
| “ | At the time I started writing this book it seemed clear to me that any between sex differences in thinking abilities were due to socialization practices, artifacts, and mistakes in the research. After reviewing a pile of journal articles that stood several feet high, and numerous books and book chapters that dwarfed the stack of journal articles, I changed my mind. The literature on sex differences in cognitive abilities is filled with inconsistent findings, contradictory theories, and emotional claims that are unsupported by the research. Yet despite all the noise in the data, clear and consistent messages could be heard. There are real and in some cases sizable sex differences with respect to some cognitive abilities. Socialization practices are undoubtedly important, but there is also good evidence that biological sex differences play a role in establishing and maintaining cognitive sex differences, a conclusion I wasn't prepared to make when I began reviewing the relevant literature. | ” | See also The study of race and intelligence is the controversial study of how human intellectual capacities may vary among the different population groups commonly known as races. ...
People have long recognized a relationship among humans between biological sex and tendency to commit crime. ...
Ruth Hubbard Ph. ...
References - ^ Quinn McNemar, The Revision of the Stanford-Binet Scale, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1942.
- ^ Burt and Moore, 1912 Burt, C. L., and Moore, R. C. (1912).
- ^ Myths of Gender: biological theories about women and men By Anne Fausto-Sterling 1992 ISBN 0465047920
- ^ Douglas N. Jackson and J. Philippe Rushton, Males have greater g: Sex differences in general mental ability from 100,000 17- to 18-year-olds on the Scholastic Assessment Test, Intelligence, Volume 34, Issue 5, September-October 2006, Pages 479-486.
- ^ Rosser, Phyllis (1989). The SAT Gender Gap: Identifying the Causes. The Centre for Women Policy Studies.
- ^ Larry V. Hedges; Amy Nowell (1995). "Sex Differences in Mental Test Scores, Variability, and Numbers of High-Scoring Individuals". Science 269: 41-45.
- ^ [Intelligence: Knowns and Unknowns http://www.lrainc.com/swtaboo/taboos/apa_01.html]
- ^ Lynn, R. (1999). Sex differences in intelligence and brain size: A developmental theory. Intelligence, 27, 1−12
- ^ Lynn, R., & Irwing, P. (2004). Sex differences on the Progressive Matrices: A meta-analysis. Intelligence, 32, 481−498
- ^ Males have greater g: Sex differences in general mental ability from 100,000 17- to 18-year-olds on the Scholastic Assessment Test (2006) Douglas N. Jackson, J. Philippe Rushton; Intelligence, 34: 479–486
- ^ IJ Deary, G Thorpe, V Wilson, JM Starr, LJ Whalley (2003). "Population sex differences in IQ at age 11: the Scottish mental survey 1932". Intelligence 31: 533–542.
- ^ Sex differences in means and variability on the progressive matrices in university students: a meta-analysis (2005) British Journal of Psychology; 505-524(20)
- ^ Sex Differences in the Brain: Men and women display patterns of behavioral and cognitive differences that reflect varying hormonal influences on brain development- By Doreen Kimura May 13, 2002.
- ^ Richard Lynn and Tatu Vanhanen IQ and Global Inequality. (2006).
- ^ Barres, Ben (13 July 2006). Does Gender Matter? Nature
- ^ a b Geary, D. (1998). Male, female: The evolution of human sex differences. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Nature is a prominent scientific journal, first published on 4 November 1869. ...
Bibliography - Born, M. P., Bleichrodt, N. & van der Flier, H. (1987). "Cross-cultural comparison of sex-related differences on intelligence tests". Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 18: 283–314.
- Haier RJ, Benbow CP. (1995). "Sex differences and lateralization in temporal lobe glucose metabolism during mathematical reasoning". Dev Neuropsychol. 11: 405–414.
- Lynn, Richard, with P.Irwing and T.Cammock (2002). "Sex differences in general knowledge". Intelligence 30: 27–40.
- Lynn, Richard (1999). "Sex differences in intelligence and brain size: a developmental theory". Intelligence 27: 1–12.
The study of race and intelligence is the controversial study of how human intellectual capacities may vary among the different population groups commonly known as races. ...
Sex and intelligence research investigates differences in the distributions of cognitive skills between men and women. ...
This article is about gender differences in humans. ...
// When comparing different species brain size does present a correlation with intelligence. ...
Environment and intelligence are two closely related aspects of human well-being. ...
Several factors can lead to significant cognitive impairment, particularly if they occur during pregnancy and childhood when the brain is growing and the blood-brain barrier is less effective. ...
Epidemiological studies have shown that human populations show a positive correlation between intelligence and height[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]. Similar associations have been found in early and late childhood and adulthood in both developed and developing countries, and associations persisted after controlling for social class and parental...
Race and health research is mostly from the US. It has found both current and historical racial differences in the frequency, treatments, and availability of treatments for several diseases. ...
Stature redirects here. ...
Whether there is a relationship between race and crime is a subject of debate. ...
Face perception is the process by which the brain and mind understand and interpret the face, particularly the human face. ...
Attempts in various fields have tried to explore a possible relation between gender and crime. ...
The topic of religiosity and intelligence pertains to possible relationships between intelligence (SAT Scores, IQ, Education, etc. ...
The subject of the inheritance of intelligence is the genetics of mental abilities. ...
In the last few centuries science has had an important influence on everyday notions of race. ...
Human Brain The biology of gender is the physical basis for behavioural differences between men and women. ...
Scientific interest in the correlation between genetic factors and violence dates back to the eugenics movement of the 19th century. ...
The field of behavioral psychology has been greatly influenced by the study of genetics. ...
Sexuality researchers are often interested in homosexuality because there is evidence from twin studies that there is a biological involvement in its determination. ...
Absolute pitch (AP), widely referred to as perfect pitch, is the ability of a person to identify or sing a musical note without the benefit of a known reference. ...
Penis size is of great concern to many men. ...
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