"There is a book about evolution of sex named Red Queen. It touches also how different female brain than male's and gives examples like for women it is difficult to rotate a map in their mind and so forth."
If that piece of information is true, it's interesting! |
I've read something related to that the other day. It was in a report about the presence of women in science and technology fields in the US.
They gave beginning engineering students a short test with questions such as "which of the following is a rotated version of this object?" Women were something like three times as likely to fail the test as men.
The author hypothesized that it was because boys are more likely to play with construction bricks and similar toys, which heightens their 3D reasoning.
After giving the students who failed, a short course on 3D reasoning (I don't quite remember what methods they used in the course), the difference between men and women was greatly reduced.
I can post the link, if you want.
In case you're wondering, I was looking for theories on why there are so few women in CS-related fields, when they were so common back in the early days. Some researchers suggest a link to social stigmas and stereotypes; others point out that women seem more inclined to consider the computer as a tool to get other things done and not as a valuable research subject in itself, while not denying that stereotypes may play a role in it. It's all very interesting stuff.