GENDER DIFFERENCES IN LANGUAGE
Boys' And Girls' Brains Are Different: Gender Differences In Language Appear Biological
ScienceDaily (Mar. 5, 2008) --
Although researchers have long agreed that girls have superior language abilities than boys, until now no
one
has clearly provided a biological basis that may account for their differences. For the first time -- and in
unambiguous findings -- researchers from Northwestern University and the University of Haifa show both that
areas of the brain associated with language work harder in girls than in boys during language tasks, and
that
boys and girls rely on different parts of the brain when performing these tasks.
"Our findings -- which suggest that language processing is more sensory in boys and more abstract in
girls -- could have major implications for teaching children and even provide support for advocates of
single
sex classrooms," said Douglas D. Burman, research associate in Northwestern's Roxelyn and Richard
Pepper Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders.
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the researchers measured brain activity in 31 boys and
in
31 girls aged 9 to 15 asthey performed spelling and writing language tasks.
The tasks were delivered in two sensory modalities -- visual and auditory. When visually presented, the
children read certain words without hearing them. Presented in an auditory mode, they heard words aloud but
did not see them.
Using a complex statistical model, the researchers accounted for differences associated with age, gender,
type
of linguistic judgment, performance accuracy and the method -- written or spoken -- in which words were
presented.
The researchers found that girls still showed significantly greater activation in language areas of
the brain than boys. The information in the tasks got through to girls' language areas of the
brain -- areas associated with abstract thinking through language. And their performance accuracy correlated
with the degree of activation in some of these language areas.
To their astonishment, however, this was not at all the case for boys. In boys, accurate performance
depended -- when reading words -- on how hard visual areas of the brain worked. In hearing words,
boys' performance depended on how hard auditory areas of the brain worked. If that pattern extends to
language processing that occurs in the classroom, it could inform teaching and testing methods.
Given boys' sensory approach, boys might be more effectively evaluated on knowledge gained from lectures
via oral tests and on knowledge gained by reading via written tests. For girls, whose language processing
appears more abstract in approach, these
different testing methods would appear unnecessary.
"One possibility is that boys have some kind of bottleneck in their sensory processes that can hold up
visual or auditory information and keep it from being fed into the language areas of the brain," Burman
said. This could result simply from girls developing faster than boys, in which case the differences between
the sexes might
disappear by adulthood.
Or, an alternative explanation is that boys create visual and auditory associations such that meanings
associated with a word are brought to mind simply from seeing or hearing the word.
While the second explanation puts males at a disadvantage in more abstract language function, those kinds of
sensory associations may have provided an evolutionary advantage for primitive men whose survival required
them to quickly recognize danger-associated sights and sounds.
If the pattern of females relying on an abstract language network and of males relying on sensory areas of
the
brain extends into adulthood -- a still unresolved question -- it could explain why women often provide more
context and abstract representation than men.
Ask a woman for directions and you may hear something like: "Turn left on Main Street, go one block
past
the drug store, and then turn right, where there's a flower shop on one corner and a cafe across the
street." Such information-laden directions may be helpful for women because all information is relevant
to the abstract concept of where to turn; however, men may require only one cue and be distracted by
additional information.
Burman is primary author of "Sex Differences in Neural Processing of Language Among Children."
Co-authored by James R. Booth (Northwestern University) and Tali Bitan (University of Haifa), the article
will
be published in the Neuropsychologia
Journal.