Nonverbal emotional vocalizations are one of the most elementary ways of communicating in humans. We examined the impact of sex differences on neural responses to laughter and crying produced by the same and opposite sex. Thirty subjects (15 women) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging during a sex identification task for laughter, crying, and neutral voices. The parahippocampal gyrus was involved in both men and women while hearing laughter of the same sex, suggesting greater positive emotional processing and greater attention toward emotional context in response to laughter of the same sex than of the opposite sex. The posterior cingulate was involved in both men and women while hearing crying of the opposite sex, suggesting tha...
Do men and women process emotional stimuli differently? This question has been addressed in some pr...
Gender specific differences in cognitive functions have been widely discussed. Considering social co...
Sex differences in emotional responding have been repeatedly postulated but less consistently shown ...
Abstract Background There is fMRI evidence that women are neurally predisposed to process infant lau...
Human voice is a gender discriminating cue and is important to mate selection. This study employed e...
Human voice is a gender discriminating cue and is important to mate selection. This study employed e...
International audienceStudies using event related potentials have shown that men are more likely tha...
Previous studies have suggested that men and women process emotional stimuli differently. In this st...
Animal and human studies implicate forebrain neural circuits in maternal behavior. Here, we hypothes...
We investigated the brain regions that mediate the processing of emotional speech in men and women b...
Recent studies have evidenced an increasing interest in sex-related brain mechanisms and cerebral la...
Interest in sex-related differences in psychological functioning has again come to the foreground wi...
To examine the effect of gender on the volume and pattern of brain activation during the viewing of ...
The basis for different neural activations in response to male and female voices as well as the ques...
Several studies report sex differences in sensitivity to gendered stimuli. We assume many of these t...
Do men and women process emotional stimuli differently? This question has been addressed in some pr...
Gender specific differences in cognitive functions have been widely discussed. Considering social co...
Sex differences in emotional responding have been repeatedly postulated but less consistently shown ...
Abstract Background There is fMRI evidence that women are neurally predisposed to process infant lau...
Human voice is a gender discriminating cue and is important to mate selection. This study employed e...
Human voice is a gender discriminating cue and is important to mate selection. This study employed e...
International audienceStudies using event related potentials have shown that men are more likely tha...
Previous studies have suggested that men and women process emotional stimuli differently. In this st...
Animal and human studies implicate forebrain neural circuits in maternal behavior. Here, we hypothes...
We investigated the brain regions that mediate the processing of emotional speech in men and women b...
Recent studies have evidenced an increasing interest in sex-related brain mechanisms and cerebral la...
Interest in sex-related differences in psychological functioning has again come to the foreground wi...
To examine the effect of gender on the volume and pattern of brain activation during the viewing of ...
The basis for different neural activations in response to male and female voices as well as the ques...
Several studies report sex differences in sensitivity to gendered stimuli. We assume many of these t...
Do men and women process emotional stimuli differently? This question has been addressed in some pr...
Gender specific differences in cognitive functions have been widely discussed. Considering social co...
Sex differences in emotional responding have been repeatedly postulated but less consistently shown ...