We would like to thank Joel and Tarrasch (1) for their comments on our paper (2), although we regret that the critique seems intended to misrepresent our scientific findings. The caption of figure 2A of ref. 2 (upon which they are commenting) clearly states that these are statistically significant connectivity differences between men and women seen over the entire population. These differences are not in a single “representative” male or female, as the Joel and Tarrasch (1) seem to indicate. Rather, they are differences in connectivity observed in the population and represent “averages.” Comprehension of basic statistics shows that such an analysis does not preclude overlap between populations, or imply that one group is completely devoid of a particular connectivity or that individual differences cannot exist. It is the overwhelming predominance of the within-hemispheric connections (blue lines) in the male brain and the equally predominant cross-hemispheric connections (orange lines) in the female brain that produces the dramatic difference in appearances of the male and female brain. On looking closely, one will find some blue lines dominant in the female connectivity and some orange lines dominant in the male connectivity.
In our dataset, 949 participants met the inclusion criterion and were part of this study, which is an unusually large sample. Disliking the findings of a study that does not agree with one’s beliefs is understandable.
We accrued and studied this sample to understand progression of neuropsychiatric disorders (3), and examined sex differences because of their prominence in the development and course of these disorders. However, we also studied the commonality and encourage Joel and Tarrasch to do so on the data that has been released.
In ref. 2, we report the differences that we observed in the population through valid scientific means and interpreted them as showing complementarity between genders. We neither state nor imply that men and women are from different planets or galaxies, as Joel and Tarrasch misrepresent (1).
The critique by Joel and Tarrasch (1) mentions a study indicating that the causal relationship between structure and function is difficult to explain. We agree, and nowhere in the paper (2) do we claim otherwise. The functional behavioral aspects presented were based on known functionality of different brain regions, as a means of stimulating further study. Notably, there are several structural and functional studies (4–6; see also references 1–9, 14–16, 21, 22, and 24–27 in ref. 2) using alternate modalities that have shown differences between men and women based on brain tissue volume and functionality.
Footnotes
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
References
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