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The Handbook of Sex Differences is a four-volume reference work
assembled and written to assess sex differences in human traits
(although findings regarding other species are also included).
Based on the authors’ highly influential 2008 book Sex
Differences, these volumes highlight important new research
findings from the last decade and a half alongside earlier
findings. Conclusions reached by meta-analyses are also included.
In this, the work’s third volume, findings from thousands of
studies pertaining to behavior, broadly defined, are summarized.
Traits covered include those involving personality, social
behavior, criminality, work, and sex stereotypes. The eight
chapters comprising Volume III are as follows: 16. Personality and
Behavioral Tendencies 17. Social Behavior 18. Acquiring, Selling,
and Consuming Behavior 19. Criminality, Near-Criminality, and
Victimization 20. Education, Work, Social Status, and Territorial
Behavior 21. Sex Stereotypes 22. Attitudes and Actions Toward
Others According to their Sex 23. Ecologically Based Sex
Differences The Handbook of Sex Differences is of significant
importance for any researcher, student, or professional who
requires a comprehensive resource on sex differences.
The Handbook of Sex Differences is a four-volume reference work
written to assess sex differences, with a primary focus on the
human species. Based on the authors’ highly influential 2008 book
Sex Differences, these volumes highlight important new research
findings from the last decade and a half alongside earlier
findings. In this, the work’s fourth and last volume, two related
questions are addressed: Are there universal sex differences (i.e.,
sex differences found in all societies)? And if the answer is yes,
what are they and how can each one be theoretically explained? To
answer the first of these two questions, this volume condenses much
of the research findings amassed in the book’s first three
volumes into summary tables. Then, to help identify likely
universal sex differences, three versions of social role theory and
two versions of evolutionary theory are examined relative to each
possible universal sex difference. Consideration is even given to
religious scriptures as a sixth type of explanation. In the
concluding analyses, 308 likely universal sex differences are
identified. No single theory was able to explain all these
differences. Nevertheless, the two evolutionary theories were
better in this regard than any of the three social role theories,
including the recently proposed biosocial version of social role
theory. The Handbook of Sex Differences is of importance for any
researcher, student, or professional who requires a comprehensive
resource on sex differences.
The Handbook of Sex Differences is a four-volume reference work
assembled and written to assess sex differences in human traits
(although findings regarding other species are also included).
Based on the authors’ highly influential 2008 book Sex
Differences, these volumes highlight important new research
findings from the last decade and a half alongside earlier
findings. Conclusions reached by meta-analyses are also included.
In this, the work’s first volume, findings from thousands of
studies are summarized regarding basic biology. Results having to
do with sex ratios at birth and traits involving a wide range of
bodily features are reported along with numerous complex aspects of
biochemistry, neurology, and physical health. The eight chapters
comprising Volume I are as follows: 1. Reproduction, Development,
and Morphology 2. Anatomical and Physiological Factors 3. Bodily
Fluids, Biochemicals, and Biochemical Receptors 4. The Brain:
Structure and Functioning 5. Physical Health and Illness 6.
Responses to Physical and Chemical Environmental Factors 7.
Responses to Stress and to Pain 8. Prenatal Factors The Handbook of
Sex Differences is of significant importance for any researcher,
student, or professional who requires a comprehensive resource on
sex differences.
The Handbook of Sex Differences is a four-volume reference work
assembled and written to assess sex differences in human traits
(although findings regarding other species are also included).
Based on the authors’ highly influential 2008 book Sex
Differences, these volumes highlight important new research
findings from the last decade and a half alongside earlier
findings. Conclusions reached by meta-analyses are also included.
This, the work’s second volume, summarizes results from thousands
of studies pertaining to cognition, broadly defined. Variables
related to perceptual and motor skills, emotions, intellectual
abilities, and mental disorders are among those examined. Even sex
differences in attitudes, beliefs, preferences, and interests are
documented in this volume. The seven chapters comprising Volume II
are as follows: 9. Perceptual Abilities and Motor Functioning 10.
Emotional Factors 11. Cognitive, Academic, and Intellectual Factors
12. Learning, Memory, Knowledge, and Cognitive States 13.
Self-Assessments and States Of Mind 14. Mental Health and Illness
15. Attitudes, Beliefs, Interests, and Preferences The Handbook of
Sex Differences is of importance for any researcher, student, or
professional who requires a comprehensive resource on sex
differences.
Offering new research and analysis on the relation between gender
and evolution, this book explains conflict between the sexes and
the frequent emergence and stubborn continuation of patriarchal
regimes that serve to control the behavior of women in societies
around the world, both past and present. Women and men are
different, on average. But that does not mean they are unequal.
Indeed, understanding average differences is key to the full
realization of equality in health care and other dimensions of
social life. Hopcroft shows that gender differences in physiology,
psychology, and behavior can be traced to slight differences in
evolved traits between men and women. These differences exist
because of sex differences in investment in offspring, which meant
that, in the environment of evolution, some adaptive problems were
more important for men to solve than for women, and vice versa. For
men, the most important adaptive problem to solve was that of
finding a mate. Men who did not solve this problem are not our
ancestors. For women, the most important adaptive problem to solve
was that of successfully bearing and raising children. Women who
did not solve this problem are not our ancestors. These small
differences underlie all the differences described in the book,
including sex differences in mate preferences, physiology,
cognition, aggression, status striving, and emotional experience.
It can also help explain the differential treatment of children by
parents, the differential success of boys and girls in modern
schools, and sex differences in style of communication.
Offering new research and analysis on the relation between gender
and evolution, this book explains conflict between the sexes and
the frequent emergence and stubborn continuation of patriarchal
regimes that serve to control the behavior of women in societies
around the world, both past and present. Women and men are
different, on average. But that does not mean they are unequal.
Indeed, understanding average differences is key to the full
realization of equality in health care and other dimensions of
social life. Hopcroft shows that gender differences in physiology,
psychology, and behavior can be traced to slight differences in
evolved traits between men and women. These differences exist
because of sex differences in investment in offspring, which meant
that, in the environment of evolution, some adaptive problems were
more important for men to solve than for women, and vice versa. For
men, the most important adaptive problem to solve was that of
finding a mate. Men who did not solve this problem are not our
ancestors. For women, the most important adaptive problem to solve
was that of successfully bearing and raising children. Women who
did not solve this problem are not our ancestors. These small
differences underlie all the differences described in the book,
including sex differences in mate preferences, physiology,
cognition, aggression, status striving, and emotional experience.
It can also help explain the differential treatment of children by
parents, the differential success of boys and girls in modern
schools, and sex differences in style of communication.
Evolution, biology, and society is a catch-all phrase encompassing
any scholarly work that utilizes evolutionary theory and/or
biological or behavioral genetic methods in the study of the human
social group, and The Oxford Handbook of Evolution, Biology, and
Society contains an much needed overview of research in the area by
sociologists and other social scientists. The examined topics cover
a wide variety of issues, including the origins of social
solidarity; religious beliefs; sex differences; gender inequality;
determinants of human happiness; the nature of social
stratification and inequality and its effects; identity, status,
and other group processes; race, ethnicity, and race
discrimination; fertility and family processes; crime and deviance;
and cultural and social change. The scholars whose work is
presented in this volume come from a variety of disciplines in
addition to sociology, including psychology, political science, and
criminology. Yet, as the essays in this volume demonstrate, the
potential of theory and methods from biology for illuminating
social phenomena is clear, and sociologists stand to gain from
learning more about them and using them in their own work. The
theory focuses on evolution by natural selection, the primary
paradigm of the biological sciences, while the methods include the
statistical analyses sociologists are familiar with, as well as
other methods that they may not be familiar with, such as
behavioral genetic methods, methods for including genetic factors
in statistical analyses, gene-wide association studies, candidate
gene studies, and methods for testing levels of hormones and other
biochemicals in blood and saliva and including these factors in
analyses. This work will be of interest to any sociologist with an
interest in exploring the interaction of biological and
sociological processes. As an introduction to the field it is
useful for teaching upper-level or graduate students in sociology
or a related social science.
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