Gender Differences in Cognitive and Neural Correlates of Remembrance of Emotional Words
Emory University · Itron (United States)
Abstract
Studies suggest that men and women have important differences in specific cognitive functions. Men show superior spatial memory and women demonstrate superior verbal memory, and women rely on emotional content to a greater degree in the processing of information. In spite of extensive research in neural correlates of human cognition, little is known about possible gender differences or the role of emotional content in the mediation of cognition. Two sets of lists of word pairs were developed, one with neutral (e.g., school-grocery) and the other with emotional (e.g., mutilate-beat) content. Male and female subjects were asked to rate emotions related to the words on several dimensions (e.g., nervous, fearful,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 0.00
- Percentile
- 98%
- References
- 7
Authors
14- JDJ. Douglas BremnerCorresponding
Emory University, Itron (United States)
- RSRobert Soufer
- RSRobert Soufer
- RDR Delaney
- GMGregory McCarthy
Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Cognition
- Mediation
- Prefrontal cortex
- Developmental psychology
- Brain activity and meditation
- Cognitive psychology
- Electroencephalography
- Gender equality