The proposal that male and female brains are prearranged in a different way has been around for a long time. In spite of everything, seeing as men and women are dissimilar in dimension, look and sexual role, why shouldn't their brain association be diverse as well? Research has approved in the past 25 years that there are rational differences in the way the two sexes get to the bottom of problems: in general, women do better in specific verbal skills and men in spatial and mathematical skills. (Kimura, Doreen (1985) or else, putting the contrast the other way, women's brains are more diffusely organized than men's. A number of explanations were offered for this apparent sex difference: Women were more verbal, meaning that in cooperation their hemispheres were given up to speech; women developed more quickly and lateralization required slower development; women were just as lateralized as men but used oral strategies more often; connections flanked by the hemispheres were stronger in women and, consequently, the irregular association of their brain was less understandable. And so on. (Moore, Charlotte (2003)
Given these details, it follows that at the same time as genital sex is related to our mental capabilities, it is going to be a very poor screening device for intellectual assessment. A lot of environmental events act together with our genetic inheritance from prenatal development onward, and the human brain are extremely impressionable and changeable. As a result, we can foresee very little about an individual's mental capabilities based on his or her sex. (The Evening Standard (2004) A number of men and women can and do stand out in activities that, on average, favor the other sex. There may be no intrinsic characteristics exceptional to the brains of either sex that of necessity limit the rational achievements of individual men or women.................