3-rx.comCustomer Support
3-rx.com
   
HomeAbout UsFAQContactHelp
News Center
Health Centers
Medical Encyclopedia
Drugs & Medications
Diseases & Conditions
Medical Symptoms
Med. Tests & Exams
Surgery & Procedures
Injuries & Wounds
Diet & Nutrition
Special Topics



\"$alt_text\"');"); } else { echo"\"$alt_text\""; } ?>


Join our Mailing List





Syndicate

You are here : 3-RX.com > Home > Psychiatry / Psychology - Sexual Health -

Sexual orientation affects how we navigate and recall lost objects, but age just targets gender

Psychiatry / Psychology • • Sexual HealthMay 23, 07

Researchers at the University of Warwick have found that sexual orientation has a real effect on how we perform mental tasks such as navigating with a map in a car but that old age does not discriminate on grounds of sexual orientation and withers all men’s minds alike just ahead of women’s.

The University of Warwick researchers worked with the BBC to collect data from over 198,000 people aged 20–65 years (109,612 men and 88,509 women). As expected they found men outperformed women on tests such as mentally rotating objects (NB the researchers’ tests used abstract objects but the skills used are also those one would use in real life to navigate with a map).

They found that women outperformed men in verbal dexterity tests, and remembering the locations of objects. However for a number of tasks the University of Warwick researchers found key differences across the range of sexual orientations studied.

For instance in mental rotation (a task where men usually perform better) they found that the table of best performance to worst was:

  * Heterosexual men
  * Bisexual men
  * Homosexual men
  * Homosexual women
  * Bisexual women
  * Heterosexual women

In general, over the range of tasks measured, where a gender performed better in a task heterosexuals of that gender tended to perform better than non-heterosexuals. When a particular gender was poorer at a task homosexual and bisexual people tended to perform better than heterosexual members of that gender.

However age was found to discriminate on gender grounds but not sexual orientation. The study found that men’s mental abilities declined faster than women’s and that sexual orientation made no difference to the rate of that decline either for men or women.
###

Note for editors: The paper has just been published in Archives of Sexual Behaviour April 2007 DOI 10.1007/s10508-006-9155-y and is entitled “Gender and Sexual Orientation Differences in Cognition Across Adulthood: Age Is Kinder to Women than to Men Regardless of Sexual Orientation”. The work was conducted at the University of Warwick’s Psychology Department by Professor Elizabeth Maylor and Dr Stian Reimers.

Contact: Peter Dunn
.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
0247-652-3708
University of Warwick



Print Version
Tell-a-Friend
comments powered by Disqus

RELATED ARTICLES:
  Anxiety increases the risk of gastrointestinal infection and long-term complications
  Addressing the needs of young women with disorders of sex development
  HPV vaccination not associated with increase in sexually transmitted infections
  How negative stereotyping affects older people
  Siblings of children with autism can show signs at 18 months
  Exploring the connection between empathy, neurohormones and aggression
  Low national funding for LGBT health research contributes to inequities, analysis finds
  Maternal mood disorder and newborn neurobehavior
  Study pinpoints cell type and brain region affected by gene mutations in autism
  New evidence on the biological basis of highly impulsive and aggressive behaviors
  Sexual function dramatically improves in women following bariatric surgery, Penn study finds
  Child Abuse Ad Shows Hidden Message for Children

 












Home | About Us | FAQ | Contact | Advertising Policy | Privacy Policy | Bookmark Site