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> How much a participant’s brain activation resembled the average male or average female activation pattern changed depending on the task, the study also found. And whether a participant’s brain had typical male or female activation for one task could not predict whether their brain structure or performance on the task was more typical of one sex over another, which “goes against the thought that a person’s brain is always more male- or female-like,” Kuceyeski says.

Cat Hicks  
I love living in the "Gender... MAYBE NOT" era of science https://www.thetransmitter.org/sex-differences/brains-sex-differences-are-subtle-and-cont...
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