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The Human Brain Is Best Described as Being on a Female/Male Continuum: Evidence from a Neuroimaging Connectivity Study

Authors :
Zhang, Yi
Luo, Qiang
Huang, Chu-Chung
Lo, Chun-Yi Zac
Langley, Christelle
Quinlan, Erin Burke
Banaschewski, Tobias
Millenet, Sabina
Bokde, Arun L W
Flor, Herta
Garavan, Hugh
Gowland, Penny
Heinz, Andreas
Ittermann, Bernd
Martinot, Jean-Luc
Artiges, Eric
Nees, Frauke
Orfanos, Dimitri Papadopoulos
Poustka, Luise
Smolka, Michael N
Walter, Henrik
Whelan, Robert
Tsai, Shih-Jen
Lin, Ching-Po
Bullmore, Ed
Schumann, Gunter
Sahakian, Barbara J
Feng, Jianfeng
for the IMAGEN consortium
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2021.

Abstract

Psychological androgyny has long been associated with greater cognitive flexibility, adaptive behavior, and better mental health, but whether a similar concept can be defined using neural features remains unknown. Using the neuroimaging data from 9620 participants, we found that global functional connectivity was stronger in the male brain before middle age but became weaker after that, when compared with the female brain, after systematic testing of potentially confounding effects. We defined a brain gender continuum by estimating the likelihood of an observed functional connectivity matrix to represent a male brain. We found that participants mapped at the center of this continuum had fewer internalizing symptoms compared with those at the 2 extreme ends. These findings suggest a novel hypothesis proposing that there exists a neuroimaging concept of androgyny using the brain gender continuum, which may be associated with better mental health in a similar way to psychological androgyny.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10473211 and 14602199
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....d8c4cedf8a355c03961e18a71b47b577