There are differences in brain wiring and sometimes they support the stereotypes but it doesn't matter; we're not our biology, it's not our destiny. The brain differences are there. Steven Pinker gets into this rather a lot. Here's an article by a different researcher on the diffs:
There are differences in brain wiring and sometimes they support the stereotypes but it doesn't matter; we're not our biology, it's not our destiny. The brain differences are there. Steven Pinker gets into this rather a lot. Here's an article by a different researcher on the diffs:
Standard deviation and distance from the mean are and indication of the strength and significance of data when assigning meaning. Just a mindset I developed in the job I retired from where I had to provide an executive summary to project managers ($$$) about the significance of my data.
There are differences in brain wiring and sometimes they support the stereotypes but it doesn't matter; we're not our biology, it's not our destiny. The brain differences are there. Steven Pinker gets into this rather a lot. Here's an article by a different researcher on the diffs:
https://stanmed.stanford.edu/2017spring/how-mens-and-womens-brains-are-different.html
Fascinating!
A thing I wish these studies had sigma and zeta values included so we could see if the data is significant, or noise more easily.
What do you mean, like evaluating to see how worthy they are of citation? Not sure what sigma & Zeta values are.
Standard deviation and distance from the mean are and indication of the strength and significance of data when assigning meaning. Just a mindset I developed in the job I retired from where I had to provide an executive summary to project managers ($$$) about the significance of my data.