Men: Difference between revisions

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* Piercarlo Valdesolo, [https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-our-brains-turn-women-into-objects/ "How Our Brains Turn Women Into Objects: There is, it turns out, more than one kind of 'objectification'"], Scientific American, 11 Oct 2011
* Piercarlo Valdesolo, [https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-our-brains-turn-women-into-objects/ "How Our Brains Turn Women Into Objects: There is, it turns out, more than one kind of 'objectification'"], Scientific American, 11 Oct 2011
:Cites a study on how men's brains are affected by visual representations of women, and how the type of objectification attributed to this is only one of at least two dimensions of objectification.
:Cites a study on how men's brains are affected by visual representations of women, and how the type of objectification attributed to this is only one of at least two dimensions of objectification.
* James Coan, John M. Gottman, Julia Babcock, and Neil Jacobson, [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/246881785_Battering_and_the_male_rejection_of_influence_from_women "Battering and the male rejection of influence from women"], Research Gate, Jan 1997


== Cross-References ==
== Cross-References ==

Revision as of 18:19, 18 December 2016

Men, neurologically, have a harder time interpreting women's voices.
Cites a study on how men's brains are affected by visual representations of women, and how the type of objectification attributed to this is only one of at least two dimensions of objectification.

Cross-References