This question has attracted attention in the past and at least now we know that there is no physical difference. All good.
However, it is also clear that hormonal development has plenty to say regarding development which does produce distinct characteristics.
What is important though is that it is never physical at all unlike a white or brown skin which signifies little else yet remains a purely physical difference..
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Male and Female Brains Are Basically the Same
Released:
1-Dec-2015
http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/644023/?sc=dwhn
According to a study published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
brains can't really fit into the categories of "male" or "female" --
their distinguishing features actually vary across a spectrum.
Researchers led by University of Tel-Aviv studied brain scans of some
1,400 individuals and could not find a single pattern that distinguishes
between a male brain and a female brain.
"Our study demonstrates
that although there are sex/gender differences in brain structure,
brains do not fall into two classes, one typical of males and the other
typical of females, nor are they aligned along a 'male brain–female
brain' continuum," the study researchers wrote in PNAS.
As reported in the Washington Post on December 1, 2015.
Brains aren’t actually ‘male’ or ‘female,’ new study suggests
Lots
of folks -- well-intentioned and otherwise -- like to point out the
supposed differences between male and female brains. But it's time to
throw away the brain gender binary, according to a study published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Brains can't really fit into the categories of "male" or "female" --
their distinguishing features actually vary across a spectrum.
It's
exciting news for anyone who studies the brain -- or gender. And it's a
step towards validating the experiences of those who live outside the gender binary.
"Whereas
a categorical difference in the genitals has always been acknowledged,
the question of how far these categories extend into human biology is
still not resolved," the authors write in the study. Structural
differences in the brain -- and differences in behavior -- are often
taken as evidence that brains can be distinctly male or female. For this
to be true, the authors write, the differences would have to be
consistent: Those who were biologically male would have to almost always
have "male" features and not female ones in their brain.
But in analyzing the MRI scans of some 1,400 individuals, researchers led by Tel Aviv University's Daphna Joel
found that mash-ups were more common. They believe their study is the
first to look for brain differences between genders by using the brain
as a whole, instead of pointing out individual structures and features
(like size, amount of gray versus white matter, and so on) in isolation.
“Nobody
has had a way of quantifying this before,” Lise Eliot, a neuroscientist
at Chicago Medical School in Illinois who was not involved in the
study, told Science Magazine. “Everything they’ve done here is new.”
The
authors found that only a very small number of the brains studied had
features that were entirely male, female, or intermediate between the
two. The vast majority had a mosaic.
"[B]rains
with features that are consistently at one end of the
“maleness-femaleness” continuum are rare," the scientists wrote in the
study. "Rather, most brains are comprised of unique “mosaics” of
features, some more common in females compared with males, some more
common in males compared with females, and some common in both females
and males."
Rockefeller University's Bruce McEwen, who edited the manuscript of the study but didn't participate in the research, told New Scientist
that the findings would likely surprise some scientists. “We are
beginning to realize the complexity of what we have traditionally
understood to be ‘male’ and ‘female’, and this study is the first step
in that direction,” he said. “I think it will change peoples’ minds.”
Joel
hopes that the study will help do away with assumptions made about
gender differences. “We separate girls and boys, men and women all the
time,” she told New Scientist. “It’s wrong, not just politically, but scientifically – everyone is different.”
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