Publications


Gender effects on callosal thickness in scaled and unscaled space.

Luders E; Narr KL; Zaidel E; Thompson PM; Toga AW;
Neuroreport. 2006-Jul-31; 17(1103-6):11
 
Some empirical data suggest that sexual dimorphisms in callosal morphology exist, but findings are not consistently replicated across laboratories. We applied novel computational surface-based methods to encode callosal thickness at high spatial resolution. We further examined whether callosal thickness and related gender effects are influenced by brain size adjustments achieved through data scaling. Significant gender differences were absent in scaled data, and women showed no regional thickness increases compared with men (in either scaled or unscaled data). In unscaled data, men exhibited significantly greater callosal thickness in a number of regions that may be attributable to larger brain dimensions in men. Alternatively, given their regional specificity, the observed differences in unscaled callosal thickness may contribute to gender-specific cognition and behavior.
 
PMID: 16837835    doi: 10.1097/01.wnr.0000227987.77304.cc
 

BMAP Author

Katherine Narr
Katherine Narr Ph.D.
(310)206-2101