Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Why Women Are Better At Multitasking Than Men

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Nov, 2016 12:44 PM
    Multitasking is harder for men because they need to mobilise additional areas of their brain and use more energy than women when switching attention between tasks, says a study.
     
    "Our findings suggest that women might find it easier than men to switch attention and their brains do not need to mobilise extra resources in doing so, as opposed to male brains," said one of the researchers, Svetlana Kuptsova from National Research University Higher School of Economics in Moscow, Russia.
     
    Such differences are typical of younger men and women aged 20 to 45, according to findings published in the journal Human Physiology.
     
    Regardless of gender and age, task switching always involves activation in certain areas of the brain, more specifically, bilateral activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal areas, inferior parietal lobes and inferior occipital gyrus.
     
     
    However, experiments conducted in this study demonstrated that in women, task switching appears to require less brain power compared to men, who showed greater activation in the dorsolateral prefrontal areas as well as the involvement of supplementary motor areas and insula, which was not observed in women.
     
    The experiments involved 140 healthy volunteers, including 69 men and 71 women aged between 20 and 65. 
     
    The participants were asked to perform a variety of tasks. In one of the experiments using functional MRI, they were asked to perform a test that required switching attention between sorting objects according to shape (round or square) and number (one or two).
     
    The use of functional MRI allowed the researchers not only to observe the participants' behaviour, but also to see what was going on in the brain as the participants switched between tasks and detect differences in brain activation between men and women.
     
    The researchers found that the gender differences in the extent of brain activation when switching between tasks only occurred in participants younger than those aged 45 to 50, while those aged 50 and older showed no gender differences either in brain activation or speed of task switching.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Is that a 'traffic signal' on Mars?

    Is that a 'traffic signal' on Mars?
    Are aliens using traffic signal to cross roads on Red Planet? Fun apart, NASA's Curiosity Mars rover has clicked a picture on the Martian surface that resembles a “traffic signal”.

    Is that a 'traffic signal' on Mars?

    Men with bulging bellies last longer in bed

    Men with bulging bellies last longer in bed
    Do not be ashamed of your bulging belly any more during sex. A fascinating research shows that men with larger bellies perform much longer between the sheets...

    Men with bulging bellies last longer in bed

    Yoga and meditation help people use gadgets better

    Yoga and meditation help people use gadgets better
    In recent years, there has been a lot of attention on improving the computer side of the brain-computer interface but very little attention to the brain side....

    Yoga and meditation help people use gadgets better

    Saudi man divorces wife for not closing car door

    Saudi man divorces wife for not closing car door
    The couple reportedly went out on a picnic and when they returned home, the wife got out, helped their children to do so and then moved to go into the...

    Saudi man divorces wife for not closing car door

    Media multi-tasking could change brain structure

    Media multi-tasking could change brain structure
    Jumping from screen to screen - using mobile phones, laptops and other media devices simultaneously - could be changing the structure of your brain...

    Media multi-tasking could change brain structure

    Educated women less inclined to use dialectal words

    Educated women less inclined to use dialectal words
    Though the study focused on a group of speakers in a single Italian region, the modelling methods used could be applied to predict how geography and...

    Educated women less inclined to use dialectal words