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Posts Tagged ‘hormones’

Female Trouble–Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS)

November 21st, 2008

This is a hormone imbalance that can result in irregular periods, unwanted hair growth, acne, extra weight gain, baldness, and patches of dark skin on the back of your neck and inner thighs that weren’t caused by some guy giving you a hickey. Nearly 1 of every 10 to 20 women have PCOS, and it tends to be especially common in young women. Cases can be mild or severe. Researchers still don’t know what causes it, but they suspect that insulin resistance plays a factor in many cases. The symptoms of PCOS start when your pituitary makes too much leutinizing hormone (LH) and/or your pancreas makes too much insulin. This causes your ovaries to make more testosterone than your body needs, which helps explain the extra acne and body hair. Too much testosterone can also cause cysts in your ovaries which aren’t so much cysts as they are immature follicles which started to develop but stopped before they could release an egg. The most common treatment for PCOS is the birth control pill, which lowers testosterone in a woman’s body. Diet and exercise are also recommended. PCOS is associated with diabetes and obesity, and can result in making it difficult to conceive. If you suspect you might have it, consultation with an endocrinologist who specializes in PCOS is highly advisable. © 2008 Psychology Today. This RSS Feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this material in your news aggregator, the site you are looking at is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact blogs@psychologytoday.com so we can take legal action immediately.

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Women & driving…

September 8th, 2008

In the past couple of weeks I have been researching gender differences in visuo-spatial abilities because I wanted to create a fun experiment for our research & methodology course. The idea came from a recent incident in which my (fairly new) car, perfectly still and parked on an wide entry road to a private car park was scratched by a runaway vehicle. With 14 years no claim discount from my insurance, you can imagine how annoyed i was when i discovered the damage on a sunday morning!

As the area were I live is usually quiet and frequented mainly by locals, for a few days I have been on the lookout to try to detect the useless driver who caused the damage. Even if I’m still looking, this was an opportunity to observe people manouvering their vehicles and struggle with parking in tight spaces. Furthermore, confirming an old italian say “Donna al volante, pericolo costante!” which best translates as “Women driving are a constant danger”, it was amusing to observe how difficult many female drivers were making what I considered fairly simple manouvres.

I know it is sexist and I know that I will attract criticisms, but let’s start with a short clip…

[myspace]http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=37889811[/myspace]

Now that you laughed about this extreme case, think about your friends and consider these two questions:

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After the lighter intro, let’s have a look at some of the published material to see what is the truth about gender difference in visuo-aptial abilities.

Informally, people believe that men and women think differently and have different abilities. These differences are exacerbated by books such as John Gray’s Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus. Deborah Tannen also published extensively to address apparent gender differences in interaction and communication between genders (i.e. You just don’t understand). Another popular book is Sex on the Brain by Deborah Blum and published in 1997 in which she is exploring the scientific evidence behind gender differences.The fact remains that differences in practical abilities such as map reading, navigation and orientation as well as driving are commonly featuring in popular culture, magazines and jokes.

Such interest in sex difference raises some interesting questions and folk-facts such as the above about women and driving which inspired this post.

Some differences have been substantiated in the literature in psychology and neuroscience. For example women are consistently showed to be better at performing tasks involving verbal abilities (Hyde & Linn, 1988, Kimura 2000, 2002), however the data regarding visuo-spatial abilities is more controversial and research provided contrasting results.

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lorenzov Psy-Research Topics

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