Large Study says women can read eyes better then men
ASPartOfMe
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Look Into My Eyes and Empathize
Now, the same team, working with the genetics company 23andMe along with scientists from France, Australia and the Netherlands, report results from a new study of performance on this test in 89,000 people across the world. The majority of these were 23andMe customers who consented to participate in research. The results confirmed that women on average do indeed score better on this test.
More importantly, the team confirmed that our genes influence performance on the Eyes Test, and went further to identify genetic variants on chromosome 3 in women that are associated with their ability to “read the mind in the eyes”.
The study was led by Varun Warrier, a Cambridge PhD student, and Professors Simon Baron-Cohen, Director of the Autism Research Centre at the University of Cambridge, and Thomas Bourgeron, of the University Paris Diderot and the Institut Pasteur.
Interestingly, performance on the Eyes Test in males was not associated with genes in this particular region of chromosome 3. The team also found the same pattern of results in an independent cohort of almost 1,500 people who were part of the Brisbane Longitudinal Twin Study, suggesting the genetic association in females is a reliable finding.
The closest genes in this tiny stretch of chromosome 3 include LRRN1 (Leucine Rich Neuronal 1) which is highly active in a part of the human brain called the striatum, and which has been shown using brain scanning to play a role in cognitive empathy. Consistent with this, genetic variants that contribute to higher scores on the Eyes Test also increase the volume of the striatum in humans, a finding that needs to be investigated further.
Previous studies have found that people with autism and anorexia tend to score lower on the Eyes Test. The team found that genetic variants that contribute to higher scores on the Eyes Test also increase the risk for anorexia, but not autism. They speculate that this may be because autism involves both social and non-social traits, and this test only measures a social trait.
Professor Bourgeron adds: “This new study demonstrates that empathy is partly genetic, but we should not lose sight of other important social factors such as early upbringing and postnatal experience.”
Professor Baron-Cohen says: “We are excited by this new discovery, and are now testing if the results replicate, and exploring precisely what these genetic variants do in the brain, to give rise to individual differences in cognitive empathy. This new study takes us one step closer in understanding such variation in the population.”
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BirdInFlight
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Interesting article; one of my traits that is "not very autism-seeming" is that I can actually more or less read a person's mood in their eyes/on their face, and see a change in their mood or demeanor. But my problem is I can't interpret WHY they are feeling the way they feel or why their mood has changed within the space of my interaction with them.
So even if you can read a person and even read their changes, you're still in trouble with the social interaction if you can't respond to what you're reading because you don't know why it's happening.
Campin_Cat
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Ah, yes----the ol' nature vs. nurture. I have often considered this----and, it has been discussed many times, here, on WP----that it seems like most females are taught to be sociable / empathetic; BUT, we, Aspies, seem to be missing that gene (like this article seems to be indicating, because it said: "people with autism... tend to score lower on the Eyes Test").
It's a good article----and, I think it provides hope that yet another piece of the puzzle, has been found----but, unfortunately, it might also be saying that no matter how hard we try, we will always fall-short, because we're missing that gene.
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