Saturday, April 4, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

This Is Why Boys Need More Emotional Support Than Girls

IANS, 28 Dec, 2017 11:17 AM
  • This Is Why Boys Need More Emotional Support Than Girls
Boys tend to be callous and display unemotional traits because of difference in brain structure, finds a research.
 
Callous-unemotional traits are characterized by a lack of empathy, a disregard for others' feelings and shallow or deficient affect, such as a lack of remorse or guilt. 
 
These traits have been linked to deficits in development of the conscience and of empathy. 
 
The findings showed that in typically-developing boys, the volume of the anterior insula or gray matter volume -- a brain region implicated in recognising emotions in others and empathy -- is larger in those with higher levels of callous-unemotional traits. 
 
The volume explained 19 per cent of the variance in callous-unemotional traits seen only in, but not in girls with the same personality traits.
 
"Our findings demonstrate that callous-unemotional traits are related to differences in brain structure in typically-developing boys without a clinical diagnosis," said lead author Nora Maria Raschle from the University of Basel in Switzerland. 
 
In the study, using magnetic resonance imaging, the researchers were able to take a closer look at the brain development of typically-developing 189 teenagers to find out whether callous-unemotional traits are linked to differences in brain structure. 
 
The researchers found that the relationship between callous-unemotional traits and brain structure differs between boys and girls. 
 
Differences in reports of increased or decreased gray matter in anterior insula in community samples of boys, or boys as compared to girls, with elevated callous-unemotional-traits may reflect maturational effects (i.e. delayed maturation of this region in males), the study noted.
 
"In a next step, we want to find out what kind of trigger leads some of these children to develop mental health problems later in life while others never develop problems," Raschle said.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

WATCH: Pakistan 'Eye-Popping' Boy Becomes Internet Sensation

WATCH: Pakistan 'Eye-Popping' Boy Becomes Internet Sensation
A 14-year-old Pakistani boy from Lahore in Pakistan has become an internet sensation for his bizarre 'eye popping' skills. Ahmed Ali possesses a bizarre talent of squeezing his eyes out beyond eye sockets by over 10 mm.

WATCH: Pakistan 'Eye-Popping' Boy Becomes Internet Sensation

Trial On For B.C. Woman Who Crown Says Told Her Husband She Would Help Him Die

Trial On For B.C. Woman Who Crown Says Told Her Husband She Would Help Him Die
CRANBROOK, B.C. — The prosecution says a woman accused of pushing her husband to kill himself offered the man pills and then told him she would get him a gun.

Trial On For B.C. Woman Who Crown Says Told Her Husband She Would Help Him Die

India Sees Highest Domestic Air Passenger Growth In 2016: Report

India Sees Highest Domestic Air Passenger Growth In 2016: Report
Both India and China have been underpinned by additional routes and increasing flight frequencies, the grouping said, while adding that the latter is likely to continue this year.

India Sees Highest Domestic Air Passenger Growth In 2016: Report

India's Jinx At Miss Universe Continues, French Beauty Crowned

India's Jinx At Miss Universe Continues, French Beauty Crowned
Miss Universe 2015 Pia Wurtzbach crowned the 23-year-old Mittenaere, who was born in the northern French town of Lille, at a glittering ceremony at Mall of Asia Arena here on Monday.

India's Jinx At Miss Universe Continues, French Beauty Crowned

Vancouver Cantata Singers Bring Italian Classics with De Profundis: Palestrina to Pizzetti

Vancouver Cantata Singers Bring Italian Classics with De Profundis: Palestrina to Pizzetti
On Saturday, February 25th, Vancouver Cantata Singers continue their 59th season with a concert performance celebrating Italian choral repertoire.

Vancouver Cantata Singers Bring Italian Classics with De Profundis: Palestrina to Pizzetti

Blood And Gore: Brussels Asks How Far Street Art Can Go

Blood And Gore: Brussels Asks How Far Street Art Can Go
BRUSSELS — A struggling child with a blade to his neck awaiting slaughter. A gutted body hanging upside down as blood seeps out. In Brussels these days, it's called street art — and names far less flattering.

Blood And Gore: Brussels Asks How Far Street Art Can Go