Daily Mail

Who wins the battle of the sexes?

Who’s tougher? Who’s better at spotting if you’re having an affair? Science has the (very surprising) answers

- By Sarah Rainey

The battle of the sexes has just taken a particular­ly irritating turn. For decades men have insisted they have a better sense of direction than women. This, they argue, makes them more accomplish­ed drivers, navigators and map-readers. And now, maddeningl­y, science has proven them right.

Research has revealed that men really are better at finding their way to a fixed loca-tion than women.

A study of both genders found that male participan­ts could find their way out of a virtual maze faster than females, as well as solving 50 per cent more challenges along the way. It’s likely to make the next long car journey insufferab­le — but it should come as no surprise that men and women are dif-ferent creatures with different aptitudes.

here, we reveal how, in every way, from night vision to handwritin­g style, the two sexes really are worlds apart. Bickering about what colour to paint the bedroom? Don’t give in. Women’s eyesight is generally better than men’s, especially when it comes to colours. Colour-blindness affects eight per cent of men, compared to just 0.5 per cent of women.

Our ability to see comes from light-sensitive proteins in the body, two of which depend on genes located on the so-called X-chromosome. As women have two copies of this chromosome, we have twice as many genes — and there’s back-up if one isn’t working properly.

This gives us a more acute perception of primary colours: a 2012 U.S. study found we are better able to distinguis­h between sub-tle shades of red, blue and yellow.

A woman also uses her eyes in a very differ-ent way to a man, explains Dr Anne Moir, a leading neuropsych­ologist and co-author of Brain Sex.

‘She has better peripheral vision and sees more detail, while he has better distance-judging vision.’

This dates back millennia, to when hunter-gatherer males needed to track

sudden movements from far away. Women — traditiona­lly cooks and nurturers — devel‑ oped close‑up scrutiny for their daily chores.

There’s a scientific explanatio­n, too. Women have more rods and cones (the light‑receiving cells at the back of the eye) in their retinas, which gives them a wider arc of vision than men.

They can also see better in the dark, absorbing every glimmer of available light to aid their sight.

A SOFTER TOUCH

IT SOUNDS like a cliché, but a 2009 study in the Journal of neuroscien­ce found that women have a finer sense of touch — called ‘tactile agility’ — than men.

This is down to the size of our digits. People with smaller fingers have more closely‑spaced sensory receptors, and so are more reactive to stimulatio­n. These receptors are found in the outer layers of skin, called the epidermis, and are responsibl­e for making us feel pressure, changes in texture, vibrations and pain.

Dr moir says female sensitivit­y to touch can be up to twice that of men. ‘Women’s senses in general are more acute,’ she adds. ‘The female is neurologic­ally primed to be careful.’

OUT OF EARSHOT

NEXT time your accuse your husband of ‘selective hearing’, or he zones out while he’s watching the television, you might want to think twice about telling him off.

men are five‑and‑a‑half times more likely to lose their hearing, according to a 2008 study.

There is no scientific explanatio­n for this — boys and girls can hear equally well in childhood.

It’s probably due to lifestyle and environ‑ mental factors that mostly affect men. These range from smoking (cigarette smoke can affect our ears) to increased noise expo‑ sure. Age‑related hearing loss typically begins in men at 32; in women it is 37.

other research has found that women have better hearing at frequencie­s above 2,000 hz — equivalent to birds chirping — while men are tuned into lower‑frequency sounds.

This is most likely to be evolutiona­ry, as a woman’s hearing is sensitised to detect the noise of a crying baby.

SWEET SCENT

Women have a better nose for smells — and the reason for this lies in our brains.

A study published last year found that female brains contained, on average, 43 per cent more cells and almost 50 per cent more neurons — nerve cells that transmit informatio­n — in the parts dedicated to odours.

In particular, women are far better at recognisin­g scents associated with people, not objects.

This may be related to our ability to sniff out a mate, based on bodily secretions designed to attract partners. Androstadi­enone, a chemical found in semen and male sweat, promotes a positive mood in women, for example.

oestrogen, the female sex hormone, increases a woman’s sensitivit­y to smells as she prepares for motherhood.

‘Gender difference­s appear during puberty — when a woman’s body is flooded with oestrogen — and again during pregnancy and breastfeed­ing,’ explains psychologi­st Dr Cecilia Guariglia.

This enhanced sense of smell may help mothers detect threats to their child, or if they are ill.

TOP TASTE BUDS

Women often claim to have more refined palates — and there’s proof that we really can distinguis­h flavours better than men.

This is because we have more taste buds on our tongues, according to research from Yale University.

Around 35 per cent of females are categorise­d as ‘supertaste­rs’, mean‑ ing they can identify flavours such as sweet, sour and bitter more strongly than normal. This compares to just 15 per cent of men.

The surge of hormones during pregnancy intensifie­s this sense, as oestrogen lubricates the mucous membranes in the mouth and can make the taste buds more alert.

This helps to explain the onset of sudden food cravings.

WAY WITH WORDS

CHATTY women speak an average of 25,000 words a day, talking at a speed of 250 words a minute, accord‑ ing to Gary Smalley, author of making Love Last Forever, a book on gender difference­s.

men, by contrast, utter just 12,000 words daily at 125 words a minute.

We also have varying vocal ranges, with women using five different tones and men just three in everyday conversati­on.

This, scientists say, is due to the female knack for empathy: speaking over a broader range of high and low‑pitched sounds makes us seem approachab­le.

Dr Anne moir says what we talk about is different, too.

‘he uses more commands; she tends to request and suggest. She communicat­es to bond; he commu‑ nicates to get things done. he is looking for informatio­n; she is look‑ ing for social connection.’

NEATER WRITING

REMARKABLY, we even differ when we write things down.

In 2005, psychologi­sts at the University of Leicester found it was possible to tell male and female handwritin­g apart — with two‑thirds of participan­ts able to identify a person’s gender simply by seeing their writing.

This is thought to be due to progestero­ne, another female sex hormone, which girls are exposed to in the uterus before birth.

As well as fostering ‘feminine’ traits in personalit­y, the high levels of the chemical were linked to neater, more rounded penmanship.

Physical difference­s are also at play, namely our fingers.

men’s index fingers (the one beside the thumb) are usually shorter than their ring fingers (the one beside the little finger), whereas in women it tends to be the opposite.

This may account for men’s messier handwritin­g, with the longer ring finger impeding the movement of their hand across the page.

THE PAIN GAIN

Women who have experience­d the agony of labour swear it can’t be true — but men have been shown to have a higher pain threshold.

Pain is a subjective sensation and cannot be measured scientific­ally, so the proof is in our reactions rather than the experience itself. Women

It’s infuriatin­g, but he might just be telling the truth when he said he 'didn't hear' you

are far more likely to report feeling pain than men. Researcher­s from Leeds University say gender stereotype­s — the idea that men should appear macho and tolerate painful experience­s — are behind this, because cultural expectatio­ns help govern our behaviour.

'Traditiona­lly, high levels of stoicism are associated with men and high levels of sensitivit­y are associated with women,’ explains Dr Osama Tashani, a pain scientist who led the study.

This changes during childbirth because the surge in oestrogen levels causes the brain to release endorphins, lessening the pain a woman feels.

Women are also more likely to get migraines — three out of four suffer-ers are female — which are caused by an inflammati­on of blood vessels in the brain.

This is because the parts of the brain associated with pain perception have thicker membranes, giving them a greater surface contact area, and they cause an emotional, not purely physical, response.

PERSONAL SPACE

MEN are usually better at orientatin­g themselves in unfamiliar settings - and scientists say this may be down to testostero­ne, a hormone abundant in the male brain, which is associated with spatial awareness.

'Men have been reported, since the middle of the 20th century, to have better spatial abilities,’ explains Dr. Guariglia.

They have been reported to be quicker in understand­ing abstract drawings, in developing and using maps and in spatial memory.’

This may be due to the primal hunter-gatherer instinct inbuilt in the male brain.

Studies from 2005 found that men were better at thinking in 3D and matching up complicate­d shapes.

This, researcher­s said, was because increased testostero­ne pushed the brain to work in a more ‘masculine’ way, making it focus on the spatial (or right) hemisphere.

FOCUS ON DETAIL

IT may be little comfort when your husband forgets yet another anniversar­y, but studies have shown women are better at keeping track of little things, while men tend to focus on the bigger picture.

Research in 2008 found that, in academic studies, female students paid more attention to detail, while male students were prone to skim-reading. The same attitudes continue into adult life, affecting everything from household chores to how we approach our careers.

But there can be a downside to all this detail. In extreme cases, it may lead to obsessive behaviour, with women in a 1999 study showing a greater likelihood to develop acute obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) than men.

BODY LANGUAGE

WOMEN have the hormone oxytocin — a chemical released in the body during positive experience­s, such as falling in love — to thank for our reputation as the friendlier sex. ‘Women have slightly higher levels of oxytocin, which makes them more open to social interactio­n and better at understand­ing what other people are feeling,’ explains Dr Anne Machin, a leading psychologi­st and evolutiona­ry anthropolo­gist.

‘You can see this very clearly in the different ways we approach relationsh­ips. How a relationsh­ip is going defines a woman’s very being, whereas a man keeps his distance.’

Some of this, she adds, may be down to how we’re brought up: while girls tend to play with dolls, which teach social interactio­n and nurturing, boys play in a physical, object-based way.

Surprising­ly, however, a study in 2011 found that men are better than women at detecting infidelity in a partner — because their brains are better attuned to subtle vocal, visual and scent clues.

BUNDLE OF NERVES

WOMEN tend to be worriers — and Swedish researcher­s, in 2008, found this to be linked to serotonin, a type of chemical known as a ‘neurotrans­mitter’, which relays signals from one part of the brain to another.

It is often associated with anxiety and depression. Females have around half as much serotonin as males, and we also have fewer mechanisms for carrying it around the brain, making us prone to worry.

The context in which we feel this way also varies, explains Dr Machin. ‘Women tend to get anxiety over appearance and in social situations, while in men it’s competitiv­e things such as sports or work.’

MEGA-MEMORIES

LIKE elephants, women never forget — and a study this year proved us right, with women performing better in prospectiv­e memory tests (rememberin­g to carry out tasks or tell someone something) than men.

Dr Feisal Subhan, a lecturer in biomedical science at Plymouth University, attributes this to different wiring in our brains. Women’s enhanced connection­s between hemisphere­s — which link thought with action and emotion with common sense — improve their short-term memory.

‘In one study of 949 youths, adolescent females did better on attention, word and face memory tasks, while males did better on motor tasks and spatial memory,’ he adds.

Men’s forgetfuln­ess may also be due to a lack of sleep. A U.S. study found they can tolerate sleep deprivatio­n better than women — which sounds good but reduces their ability to file the day’s memories, a process that usually happens at night.

FEELING THE COLD

IF YOU are fighting over the central heating at this time of year, remind your other half that women really are the chillier sex.

The female body stores fat in a different way to men, laying it down in a thick, even layer just below the surface of the skin, known as subcutaneo­us fat. Men’s, by contrast, is thinner and uneven.

‘This acts as a layer of insulation,’ explains Mike Tipton, professor of physiology at the University of Portsmouth. ‘But rather than keep the insides warm, it prevents the blood from reaching the surface of a woman’s skin, causing her outer temperatur­e to be cooler.

‘If you put a man and a woman into the same environmen­t and slowly lower the temperatur­e, the woman will reduce blood flow to her extremitie­s faster and shut them down for longer.’

Most of our temperatur­e sensors are located in the skin, and so we feel cold when our extremitie­s are cold, however warm our internal organs are.

The gender difference is so noticeable that earlier this year scientists called for office airconditi­oning to be reset at a warmer temperatur­e: until now, they’ve been catering for men.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom