4.6 Article

Gender Differences in Sustained Attentional Control Relate to Gender Inequality across Countries

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0165100

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Funding

  1. US Department of Veterans Affairs grant: VA Advanced Geriatric Fellowship
  2. US Department of Veterans Affairs grant: VA Rehabilitation R&D Center of Excellence Award [B6796-C]
  3. US Department of Veterans Affairs grant: VA Clinical Science R&D Career Development Award [1IK2CX000706-01A2]
  4. VA Advanced Geriatric Fellowship
  5. VA Rehabilitation R&D Center of Excellence Award [B6796-C]
  6. VA Clinical Science R&D Career Development Award [1IK2CX000706-01A2]

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Sustained attentional control is critical for everyday tasks and success in school and employment. Understanding gender differences in sustained attentional control, and their potential sources, is an important goal of psychology and neuroscience and of great relevance to society. We used a large web-based sample (n = 21,484, from testmybrain.org) to examine gender differences in sustained attentional control. Our sample included participants from 41 countries, allowing us to examine how gender differences in each country relate to national indices of gender equality. We found significant gender differences in certain aspects of sustained attentional control. Using indices of gender equality, we found that overall sustained attentional control performance was lower in countries with less equality and that there were greater gender differences in performance in countries with less equality. These findings suggest that creating sociocultural conditions which value women and men equally can improve a component of sustained attention and reduce gender disparities in cognition.

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