The science of sex differences in science and mathematics (2007)
| Venue: | Psychological Science in the Public Interest |
| Citations: | 3 - 1 self |
BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Halpern07thescience,
author = {Diane F. Halpern and Camilla P. Benbow and David C. Geary and Ruben C. Gur and Janet Shibley Hyde and Morton Ann Gernsbacher},
title = {The science of sex differences in science and mathematics},
booktitle = {Psychological Science in the Public Interest},
year = {2007},
pages = {1--51}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
SUMMARY—Amid ongoing public speculation about the reasons for sex differences in careers in science and mathematics, we present a consensus statement that is based on the best available scientific evidence. Sex differences in science and math achievement and ability are smaller for the mid-range of the abilities distribution than they are for those with the highest levels of achievement and ability. Males are more variable on most measures of quantitative and visuospatial ability, which necessarily results in more males at both high- and low-ability extremes; the reasons why males are often more variable remain elusive. Successful careers in math and science require many types of cognitive abilities. Females tend to excel in verbal abilities, with large differences between females and males found when assessments include writing







