Hi all,
Arne von Ruschkowski gives an overview of gender differences in loudness perception (in German though):
and argues that the length of the ear canal and the air volume between eardrum and headphone could not be the reasons for the different judgments of male and female participants.
One observation that has been made is that already female newborns exhibit stronger otoacoustic emissions than male newborns:
Otoacoustic emissions and auditory evoked potentials are sexually dimporphic:
Sex differences in male and female mosquito hearing are huge, and their hearing organs differ a lot.
Best, Tim
♪ ♫ ♪ ♫ ♪ ♫ ♪ ♫ ♪ ♫ ♪ ♫ ♪ ♫ ♪ ♫ Dr. Tim Ziemer Bremen Spatial Cognition Center University of Bremen 28359 Bremen Office: Cartesium 3.13 Enrique-Schmidt-Str. 5 Fon + 49 (0) 421-218-64280 Fax + 49 (0) 421-218-64239 ziemer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxhttps://bscc.spatial-cognition.de/ziemer
Dear Ani, dear all,
we found sex differences in both ear training and musical imagery skills in music students/musicians, see: Wolf, A., & Kopiez, R. (2018). Development and Validation of the Musical Ear Training Assessment (META). Journal of Research in Music Education, 66, 53-70. Wolf, A., Kopiez, R., & Platz, F. (2018). Thinking in music: An objective measure of notation-evoked sound imagery in musicians. Psychomusicology: Music, Mind, and Brain, 28(4), 209-221.
For both skills men outperformed women, which replicated in every sample we collected for these papers. My best guess is a difference in motivation in female and male students with music theory and ear training being the most logical and structural type of skill within a music programme (the MINT within music, maybe). Plus probably stereotype threat, since in Germany most music theory staff are male.
Best Anna
Dear Ani,there are well-known sex differences in otoacoustic emission levels, e.g. McFadden papers, with females outperforming males. You can easily find several references searching for "sex difference OAE", e.g., on Pubmed.regardsArturoOn 2022-01-09 16:33, Patel, Aniruddh D. wrote:Dear List, I am trying to find papers reporting sex differences in behavioral or neural measures of auditory processing in vertebrates. I'd be grateful for pointers to any references, including review chapters. Btw, my impression from the papers I've found so far is that females generally outperform males (e.g., refs below), and I wonder if this holds across a larger set of studies. Benichov, J. I., Benezra, S. E., Vallentin, D., Globerson, E., Long, M. A., & Tchernichovski, O. (2016). The forebrain song system mediates predictive call timing in female and male zebra finches. _Current Biology_, _26_(3), 309-318. Kriengwatana, B., Spierings, M. J., & ten Cate, C. (2016). Auditory discrimination learning in zebra finches: effects of sex, early life conditions and stimulus characteristics. _Animal Behaviour_, _116_, 99-112. Krizman, J., Bonacina, S., & Kraus, N. (2020). Sex differences in subcortical auditory processing only partially explain higher prevalence of language disorders in males. _Hearing research_, _398_, 108075. Thanks, and best wishes for the new year, Ani Patel Aniruddh D. Patel Professor, Dept. of Psychology, Tufts University CIFAR Fellow Brain, Mind, and Consciousness Program https://as.tufts.edu/psychology/people/faculty/aniruddh-patel [1] Links: ------ [1] https://as.tufts.edu/psychology/people/faculty/aniruddh-patel
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