It
happens like this: You and your husband come home from a long day at work. You're
both tired and stressed. You want to talk about a confrontation you had with your
boss and a project that's giving you trouble. He wants to lie on the couch and
channel-surf. If you can convince him to listen to you, he promptly tells you
what you should have done about the boss blowup. The whole thing turns into an
argument, and instead of talking it out with you, he storms off.
At least
some part of this argument should sound familiar to many women. We're constantly
asking ourselves what's going on in that man's head:
"Why doesn't
he ever seem to listen?"
"Why doesn't he remember things I've
told him?"
"Why doesn't he notice how messy the house is?"
"What is it with him and that remote control, anyway?"
Turns out he's not just being stubborn, and it's not just how he was raised. According
to family therapist Michael Gurian, author of the new book What Could He Be Thinking?,
male and female brains are wired differently long before birth. The surge of hormones
--testosterone for men, estrogen for women (although we each get some of both
hormones) -- that floods our developing fetal brains leads to marked differences
in brain development and neural connections.
Brain imaging technologies
such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET)
scans demonstrate these differences, says Gurian, who has relied on the work of
a variety of neuroscientists and biologists in writing What Could He Be Thinking?
These scans can show how and where the brain functions during activities. The
typically "male" brain, for example, devotes much more brain area to
spatial skills -- things like mechanical design, manipulation of physical objects,
and abstraction. With so much brain area devoted to spatials, male brains usually
have less area for word use and word production.
There are a number of
other differences, and some of them aren't just structural, but chemical. The
male brain usually produces less of two powerful chemicals, serotonin and oxytocin,
than the female brain does. Serotonin tends to calm us down, while oxytocin may
be related to bonding behaviors.
Picturing the Brain
PET scans
provide a dynamic, "living color" illustration of male-female brain
differences. "If you line up PET scans of 50 male brains and 50 female brains,
you'll see more colors lighting up in the female brain because there's about 15%
more blood flow, on average, in the female brain," says Gurian. If you show
those 100 men and women a picture of someone looking sad, he says, you'll notice
that less of the male brain lights up as the men try to figure out the emotion
involved. "There's less involvement of the emotive centers and less going
on in the hippocampus, where memory storage is."
On the other hand,
if the same 100 men and women were asked to do a math or science problem, the
PET scan would show, on average, that women used more of their brain to get the
answer than the men did. "The male brain tends to be more efficient to lateralize
and compartmentalize, which has the advantage of making him more task-focused.
The female brain has more [nerve] connections and constantly cross-signals and
takes in more, so it tends to see and feel more than the male brain," Gurian
says.
And new research from UCLA scientists suggests that male-female
brain differences may be genetically hard-wired in place from the very beginning,
even before the flood of hormones occurs during fetal development. Studying the
brains of male and female mice, researchers found 18 genes produced at higher
levels in male brains while 36 genes were produced at higher levels in female
brains. "This provides evidence that there are differences in gene expression
in male and female brains, before any influence of hormones," says Eric Vilain,
MD, assistant professor of human genetics and urology at the David Geffen School
of Medicine at UCLA and a pediatrician at UCLA's Mattel Children's Hospital. "It's
possible that these genetic differences may influence the development of differences
in male and female brain structures, independently of hormonal action."
Why Won't He Talk?
So why doesn't he want to talk? "Males,
first of all, don't take in as much of the conversation as women do," Gurian
says. "Because we have more cortical areas devoted to spatial mechanicals
and fewer verbal centers, we're not getting as much of it, and in general, men
will want to end conversations more quickly than women."
When he
sprawls on the couch with the remote at the end of the day, a guy may not be deliberately
ignoring his wife or girlfriend. The male brain rejuvenates differently than the
female brain does, Gurian says. "Using brain scans, University of Pennsylvania
neuroscientist Ruben Gurian found that the male brain goes to a rest state to
rejuvenate much more than the female brain does. To build brain cells and restore
himself, a man needs to 'zone out,'" Gurian says. That's why he channel-surfs
or stares at the computer.
But the female brain, thanks to all that oxytocin,
wants to bond at the end of the day in order to rejuvenate. "She wants to
talk, using all those verbal centers, and she wants to get close to him,"
Gurian says. But the timing's all off. "If the wife takes a break and vents
first to someone else -- a friend on the phone, perhaps -- and lets her husband
rejuvenate during that zone-out period, he'll be much more prepared to listen
later on, during dinner, for example. It's all about timing."
Of
course, male-female brain differentiation isn't black and white. We all know men
who are better at talking and expressing their feelings than their wives are,
and women who can fix a flat while their husband is still on the phone to AAA
but would rather get root canal than talk about their feelings. "I'm arguing
that there is a broad brain spectrum, and we're all along the continuum,"
he says. "There isn't just one kind of male and one kind of female."
Gurian has also dubbed some people, both men and women, "bridge brains"
-- people whose brain wiring crosses sexes and fits in as much with the predicted
behavior of the opposite sex as with their own. "Nature has always liked
the exception as much as the rule," he says.
And he's not arguing
that men can point to brain research and say, "Great! Now I have an excuse
not to talk, to channel-surf all the time, and forget our anniversary."
"Males and females both have to do their part. Men do need to listen
to their spouses," Gurian says. "But what I'm suggesting is the natural
rhythm is awry right now. If men and women could both understand better how their
brains work differently, they could use these natural rhythms to relate better."
Published Nov. 17, 2003.
SOURCES: Michael Gurian, author, What Could
He Be Thinking?; cofounder,
Gurian Institute, Spokane, Wash. Eric Vilain,
MD, assistant professor of
human genetics and urology, David Geffen School
of Medicine, UCLA.
© 1996-2003 WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.