The researchers presented a group of vervet monkeys with a selection of toys, including rag dolls, trucks and some gender-neutral items such as picture books. They found that male monkeys spent more time playing with the “masculine” toys than their female counterparts did, and female monkeys spent more time interacting with the playthings typically preferred by girls. Both sexes spent equal time monkeying with the picture books and other gender-neutral toys.
Because vervet monkeys are unlikely to be swayed by the social pressures of human culture, the results imply that toy preferences in children result at least in part from innate biological differences. —Larry Cahill —His Brain, Her Brain (Scientific American)
Similar:
How a billionaires boys’ club came to dominate the public square
The world’s richest man, Elon Musk, atta...
Business
A Dance Mom Gets Schooled by a Ballet Mistress Who Can Write
Avoid trying to publicly shame a ballet ...
Art
Should the AP Really Have Fired This Pulitzer-Prize War Photographer?
The original shot caught a Syrian rebel ...
Aesthetics
Why Tetris is the 'perfect' video game
Rather than wanting to make a film about...
Aesthetics
Justine Sacco Is Good at Her Job, and How I Came To Peace With Her
Justine Sacco is the PR exec whose tweet...
Culture
I just learned I only have months to live. This is what I want to say. - The Boston Globe
What a storyteller. Boston Globe jour...
Awesome


