Wednesday, December 10, 2025
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Nov, 2014 09:11 AM
  • Y chromosome does not affect women's sexuality
Women born with a rare condition that gives them a Y chromosome do not only look like women physically, they also have the same brain responses to visual sexual stimuli, says a new study. And the condition is known as complete androgen insensitivity or CAIS.
 
Females normally have an XX chromosome pair and males have an XY chromosome pair. The Y chromosome was identified as the sex-determining chromosome in 1905.
 
In an individual with CAIS, the body's cells are unable to respond to androgen, or male hormones.
 
"Our findings clearly rule out a direct effect of the Y chromosome in producing masculine patterns of response," said Kim Wallen, professor of psychology and behavioural neuro-endocrinology at Emory University in the US.
 
"It is further evidence that we need to revamp our thinking about what we mean by 'man' and 'woman'," Wallen added.
 
The study involved 13 women with CAIS in addition to women without CAIS and men.
 
The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study the neural activity their brains.
 
"We did not find any difference between the neural responses of women with CAIS and typical women, although they were both very different from those of the men in the study," said co-researcher Stephan Hamann.
 
"It further confirms that women with CAIS are typical women psychologically, as well as their physical phenotype, despite having a Y chromosome," Hamann concluded.
 
The study appeared in the journal Hormones and Behavior.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Proper breathing is key to body, mind control

Proper breathing is key to body, mind control
Breathing is the most essential and frequent activity that we engage in from birth till death. Yet it is one of the most neglected aspects of our...

Proper breathing is key to body, mind control

Women tend to ignore heart symptoms more

Women tend to ignore heart symptoms more
Partly due to a perception that coronary artery disease is a "man's disease", women are more likely to delay seeking care when heart symptoms...

Women tend to ignore heart symptoms more

Snoring masks don't kill sex life: Study

Snoring masks don't kill sex life: Study
A common therapy to tackle obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) does not become a hindrance between the sheets, says a study, allaying fears of OSA...

Snoring masks don't kill sex life: Study

Dieting? Tips for eating out

Dieting? Tips for eating out
One in five calorie-conscious youths are shunning their friends in favour of their figures, admitting they would cancel plans, or have done so...

Dieting? Tips for eating out

Stay energised post festive season with sherbets, lassi, tea

Stay energised post festive season with sherbets, lassi, tea
What better way to ease up on your tummy post the festive season than with some truly exotic and healthy beverages? Take your pick from nearly a century-old...

Stay energised post festive season with sherbets, lassi, tea

Pay attention to your baby for emotional well being

Pay attention to your baby for emotional well being
If a mother responds more sensitively to her baby during playtime, the child is less likely to display callous, unemotional behaviour as a toddler...

Pay attention to your baby for emotional well being