| Boys' and Girls' Brains Process Faces and Expressions Differently | |
WASHINGTON -- To recognize faces and identify facial expression, both with
equal skill, pre-pubescent boys use more of their right brain and pre-pubescent
girls use more of their left brain. This suggests that the brains of males and
females are organized differently before adulthood, and may mean that men and
women who suffer brain injuries will benefit from different treatment regimes.
These findings are reported in the July issue of Neuropsychology, published by
the American Psychological Association (APA).
At the State University of New York at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences, D. Erik Everhart, Ph.D., Janet L. Shucard, Ph.D., Teresa Quatrin, M.D.
and David W. Shucard, Ph.D. studied 17 boys and 18 girls between the ages of 8
and 11 years. Given previous evidence for the brain's right-hemisphere
superiority in face processing, as well as adult male superiority at spatial and
non-verbal skills, the research team studied pre-pubescent children to see
whether boys' and girls' brains are already differentiated in these areas before
puberty.
In the study, the children performed two different types of tasks. For the
face-recognition-memory task, they viewed a series of three-slide sets. In each
set, the first slide had a face with an "X" in the middle to fixate their gaze;
it served as a baseline. The second slide gave them a "target" face to study.
The third "recognition" slide offered three faces, from which they had to choose
the target face regardless of expression. Researchers used an electroencephalo-graphic
(EEG) measure, called the Event-Related Brain Potential, to study how the
children's brain waves changed in the left and right hemispheres as they
performed this task.
In the second task, facial affect (emotional expression) identification, the
children viewed 24 pairs of slides. For the first slide of each pair, they had
to pick which face of four along the bottom displayed an emotion matching that
of a single face at the slide's top. In the second slide, four faces were the
same as the top face of slide one, but with different feelings. The children had
to pick the face whose feelings matched the feeling shown in the first slide.
There was no EEG measurement; instead researchers tallied the children's
accuracy and response times.
Supporting the researchers' hypothesis, prepubertal boys showed significantly
greater right- versus left-hemisphere activity during the presentation of face
stimuli, whereas girls displayed significantly greater left- versus
right-hemisphere involvement. What's more, boys' right-hemisphere activity
correlated significantly with their accuracy in identifying facial affect -- a
relationship not demonstrated for girls. Boys and girls performed equally well
on all tasks, but, the authors say, "they may use differing, though overlapping,
neuronal systems to complete the task."
"It is possible," the authors speculate, "that boys process faces at a global
level (right hemisphere), whereas girls process faces at a more local level
(left hemisphere)." If so, they add, "the girls' approach could be more of an
advantage in detecting the fine changes in affective expression, and thus they
would be better at reading people." The findings, says Erik Everhart, do not
reflect an "either-or" phenomenon, but rather a tendency to use different
neuronal systems successfully, with many individual differences.
Finally, the authors explore the study's important implications for how injury
to different parts of the brain, for example from strokes, might differently
affect the sexes. "The deficits in face processing and emotion perception that
occur following injury to this [face-processing] region," they write, "impact
the patient socially and have wide-ranging effects on their relationships,
employment and more." Understanding the differential damage caused by a brain
lesion can, they explain, help determine the course of treatment.
Article: "Sex-Related Differences in Event-Related Potentials, Face Recognition,
and Facial Affect Processing in Prepubertal Children," D. Erik Everhart, Ph.D.,
Janet L. Shucard, Ph.D., Teresa Quatrin, M.D., and David W. Shucard, Ph.D.,
State University of New York at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences; Neuropsychology, Vol. 15. No. 3
Full text of the article is available after July 17at
http://www.apa.org/journals/neu/press_releases/July01/neu153329.html
---American Psychological Association
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