reviewScienceNov 3, 2005Closed access

Sex Differences in the Brain: Implications for Explaining Autism

University of Cambridge

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Empathizing is the capacity to predict and to respond to the behavior of agents (usually people) by inferring their mental states and responding to these with an appropriate emotion. Systemizing is the capacity to predict and to respond to the behavior of nonagentive deterministic systems by analyzing input-operation-output relations and inferring the rules that govern such systems. At a population level, females are stronger empathizers and males are stronger systemizers. The "extreme male brain" theory posits that autism represents an extreme of the male pattern (impaired empathizing and enhanced systemizing). Here we suggest that specific aspects of autistic neuroanatomy may also be extremes of typical male…

Citation impact

1,157
total citations
FWCI
16.83
Percentile
100%
References
75
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Autism
  • Psychology
  • Biology
  • Developmental psychology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Gender equality
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