Tuesday 25 November 2014

Because of hormone


By nature men are different from women both physical differences and mental differences, these differences bring to different behavior, thinking and attitude.

According to According to BBC News's "Women bosses 'more depressed' than male counterparts" reports that women bosses have more depressed than men bosses because women bosses always deal with stereotypes, prejudice, colleagues and superiors. Her colleagues don’t believe the women whom could be good leaders and her works will be more monitored by their advisers than men’s.

Men and women are different between the body, thinking and behavior due to sexual hormones and brain structure. Women have bigger frontal lobe than men’s. Frontal lobe is related to our thinking this frontal lobe will motivate limbic system that is concerned about controlling emotions and feeling as a result women have more emotion than men. Moreover women’s Cerebral Cortex have more neuronal cells than men’s that make women thinking; even a small thing and usually use more emotional decisions than men. On the other hand men have bigger parietal lobe than women’s, men can solve the stress in the short term and facing problem faster than women.


Plus women have bigger Hippocampus that keep stories memory so women trend to remember more situations and can recall old stories in the past and felling in situations  that make her feel sad or happy easier than men whom only usually remember important stories.
In general women’s brain products serotonin “controlling emotion restrain aggression” more than men’s, usually men look more aggressive and stronger than women. In stressful situations, women’s brain product less serotonin men’s brain doesn’t so our hormones and brain structure are main factor to our depression.
 

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Reference
Stephens,P. (2014, November 20). Women bosses 'more depressed' than male counterparts. BBC News Health. Retrieved from http://www.bbc.com/news/health-30127275

6 comments:

  1. Thip, thanks for the interesting information. As I was reading it, especially your response, which sounded more like a response written by a biology major, or perhaps even a neuro-science major, rather than someone with a background in law, I was wondering if you had found that the same prejudices applied in your own professional life as a lawyer and to what extent. I would have had to do some research before I could have written such a response with so much specific detail.

    Since I'm male, I'm probably not in the best position to share experiences of sexism. When I think of sexism and feminist issues I generally think of my mum, who whilst never talking much about such things, always seemed to me a model of smashing old social customs and traditions that were mindlessly unhealthy: in the early 60s, she harangued the local banks into changing their naming conventions from referring to her as Mrs Keith F. (my father's name) and insisted that they use her own full name as of equal importance to my fathers.
    She had also been an avid golfer in the 50s, supported by her government job. And not in the habit of behaving as expected merely because it was some ancient way considered "proper". I suspect her parents despaired, and that she was the sort of woman that people wrote newspaper columns about 60 years ago as they deplored the decline in morals of young people, especially among women.

    Such complaints are almost always wrong - the young seem to me to generally do much better at understanding and applying moral reasoning than does dead tradition inherited from our less developed ancestors.

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    1. And my morning coffee has cooled a bit as one response to Thip's post led to another idea that led to another. But it was rather fun, and nice way to start the day.

      Thanks to Thip for her stimulating blog post.

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    2. I know these information because I took forensic science subject last year of bachelor degree. At first I thought it is scary subject to operate a body but it is amazing subject. I got a lot of surprised knowledge.

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    3. Cool!
      I never studied biology after high school. Although I've continued reading in that area, your forensic knowledge sounds much more detailed than my knowledge of brain functions and the like.

      Have you ever used that in your work as a lawyer? It doesn't sound like something that would come up at Baker and MacKenzie, but perhaps I have the wrong idea about the sort of law that they practice.

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  2. They are good information. So, there are biological differences between men and women, then we cannot change the situation where women are more depressed? In case of transgenders, people who changed their genders from male to female, are they less depressed than women?

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    1. I think transgendered men are less depressed than real women but they are more depressed than other men. By nature men usually are less depressed than women but men who had transgender have some brain structure or hormone like women's for example they are bigger Hippocampus than real men .These differences lead to abnormal sexual hormone levels almost of them have higher female hormone than real men's so some their behaviors seem like women, Although they had transgender their brain structure did not change anything. Notice we can separate men who has transgender from real women from their behavior, voice, or even from their works.

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