Blocks and bodies: sex differences in a novel version of the Mental Rotations Test
- PMID: 18036595
- PMCID: PMC2683583
- DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2007.09.014
Blocks and bodies: sex differences in a novel version of the Mental Rotations Test
Abstract
A novel version of the Mental Rotations Test (MRT) that alternated the standard block figures with three-dimensional human figures was administered to 99 men and 129 women. Women and men differed predictably in their retrospective reports of childhood play and digit ratios, a putative measure of prenatal androgen action. Compared to the block figure items, human figure items on the modified MRT were associated with an improvement in performance in both sexes. However, consistent with the study hypothesis, the enhancing effect of the human figure condition on performance as measured by conventional scores was smaller in men compared to women and not at all evident in men when performance was measured by ratio scores. A closer inspection of the human figures effects on test scores showed performance in women improved for both male and female figure items. In contrast, relative to scores on block figure items, performance in men improved when stimuli were male figures but did not improve when stimuli were female figures. These results add to the evidence that the magnitude of sex differences in scores on the MRT may vary according to the test content and item properties. The findings suggest that online measures of cognitive processing in response to different classes of test stimuli (e.g., animate vs. inanimate objects, self-relevant vs. neutral stimuli) may prove useful in research aimed at understanding the hormonal and social factors contributing to the sex difference in performance on the MRT.
Figures
References
-
- Alexander GM. Associations among gender-linked toy preferences, digit ratio and spatial ability: Evidence from eye-tracking analysis. Arch Sex Behav. 2006;35:699–709. - PubMed
-
- Alexander GM, Hines M. Gender labels and play styles: their relative contribution to children’s selection of playmates. Child Development. 1994;65:869–79. - PubMed
-
- Alexander GM, Peterson BS. Sex steroids and human behavior: Implications for developmental psychopathology. CNS Spectrums. 2001;6:75–88. - PubMed
-
- Alexander GM, Swerdloff RS, Wang C, Davidson T, McDonald V, Steiner B, Hines M. Androgen-behavior correlations in hypogonadal men and eugonadal men. II. Cognitive abilities. Horm Behav. 1998;33:85–94. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
