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MNN.COM › Health › Fitness & Well-Being
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    What's this?
Men and women literally see the world differently
A new study shows that the sexes really do see the world differently. Men notice small details and moving things while women are more sensitive to color changes.

By

LiveScience Staff
Tue, Sep 04 2012 at 11:31 AM
 7

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Healthy Living, Research & Innovation
Blue eye

Photo: Shutterstock

Guys' eyes are more sensitive to small details and moving objects, while women are more perceptive to color changes, according to a new vision study that suggests men and women actually do see things differently.
 
"As with other senses, such as hearing and the olfactory system, there are marked sex differences in vision between men and women," researcher Israel Abramov, of the City University of New York (CUNY), said in a statement. Research has shown women have more sensitive ears and sniffers than men.
 
"[A] recent, large review of the literature concluded that, in most cases females had better sensitivity, and discriminated and categorized odors better than males," Abramov and colleagues write Tuesday (Sept. 4) in the journal Biology of Sex Differences.
 
Abramov and his team from CUNY's Brooklyn and Hunter Colleges compared the vision of males and females over age 16 who had normal color vision and 20/20 sight — or at least 20/20 vision with glasses or contacts.
 
In one part of the study, the researchers asked the volunteers to describe different colors shown to them. They found that the guys required a slightly longer wavelength of a color to experience the same shade as women and the men were less able to tell the difference between hues. [Your Color Red Really Could Be My Blue]
 
The researchers also showed the participants images made up of light and dark bars that varied in width and alternated in color so that they appeared to flicker, a measure of participants' sensitivity to contrast. Compared with the women, the male volunteers were better able to identify the more rapidly changing images made up of thinner bars, the researchers said.
 
Abramov explained in a statement these elements of vision are linked to specific sets of thalamic neurons in the brain's primary visual cortex. The development of these neurons is controlled by male sex hormones called androgens when the embryo is developing into a fetus.
 
"We suggest that, since these neurons are guided by the cortex during embryogenesis, that testosterone plays a major role, somehow leading to different connectivity between males and females," Abramov said. "The evolutionary driving force between these differences is less clear."
 
Previous research found that men and women also focus differently. In experiments at the University of Southern California, researchers found that men are likely to fixate on the mouth of a person in conversation and also are more likely to be distracted by movement behind that person. Meanwhile, women tend to shift their gaze between a speaker's eyes and body, and they are more likely to be distracted by other people, the researchers found.
 
 
Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.
 
Related on LiveScience.com:
  • 5 Myths About Women's Bodies
  • Busted! 6 Gender Myths in the Bedroom & Beyond
  • 10 Things Every Woman Should Know About a Man's Brain
     
This story was originally written for LiveScience and is reprinted with permission here. Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

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anonymous
Sigh Feb 21 2013 at 10:14 PM

Well for all of you like OMG I'm a guy and I see color great or something... OBVIOUSLY there will be a range between individuals... Pretty sure the scientists accounted for that before they published their findings *facepalm*

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anonymous
Jared Feb 21 2013 at 12:38 PM

I'm not sure the author of this understands the word "literally" and how it doesn't make sense in this context.

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CzDSebhaam's picture
Shaun Linnane Feb 20 2013 at 12:26 PM

Is it that we both see things differently? or is it that we both use our brains in different ways that change the way our eyes perceive the outcomes?

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anonymous
Uhoh Feb 17 2013 at 1:07 AM

Oh my... I'm a man!!! D:
Even being xx.

I just noticed that I fixate on the mouth while in a conversation less than a year ago, funny!

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anonymous
Guest Jan 01 2013 at 1:35 AM

I am female and extremely sensitive to color...

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anonymous
Guest Dec 17 2012 at 5:37 PM

baloney, specially the "genetic" fables...er "theory"

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melpadillapag's picture
Mel Padilla Sep 05 2012 at 4:03 PM

Interesting! Thank you for sharing

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