Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Why Women Are Better At Remembering Tasks-To-Do

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 May, 2015 11:52 AM
    Now is the time to finally listen to your wife as women are better than men at remembering things to do, a new study finds.
     
    The study involved putting 100 men and women through a battery of memory tests. These judged prospective memory; that is remembering to carry out plans.
     
    The volunteers, who were aged between 15 and 40, found it harder to remember to do things the further they were into the future, Daily Mail reported.
     
    The females also excelled at remembering plans that involved doing, rather than saying, something.
     
    "A real life example of this would be, in a family, you would expect the woman to be the one to remember to buy some milk after work," researcher Liana Palermo from the Aston University in Birmingham was quoted as saying.
     
    "Or she will remember to give a book back to a friend when she sees him next. She will be better at all of these kind of tasks than a man," Palermo added.
     
    Palermo said the gender difference may be down to differences in hormones or brain structure.
     
    The brain's memory hub shrinks in men, but not in women, between the ages of 20 and 40.
     
    "An alternative hypothesis is that the sex differences we found could be due to the care-taking role often assumed by women and the fact that in addition to work responsibilities, women also have more responsibilities at home," Palermo said.
     
    "As a consequence of this social role, in daily life women might perform tasks involving prospective memory more than men, enhancing their performance in remembering to remember."
     
    The study was published in the Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    No-Tip Restaurant In Philadelphia Offers Food For Thought On Hourly Wages, Benefits For Employees

    No-Tip Restaurant In Philadelphia Offers Food For Thought On Hourly Wages, Benefits For Employees
    PHILADELPHIA — Customers to Girard Brasserie and Bruncherie might be in for a surprise when they read the note attached to their bills: "Tipping is not necessary."

    No-Tip Restaurant In Philadelphia Offers Food For Thought On Hourly Wages, Benefits For Employees

    Dancing Genitals Video For Kids' Show Not Progressive Enough For Some Swedes

    Dancing Genitals Video For Kids' Show Not Progressive Enough For Some Swedes
    STOCKHOLM — In socially liberal Sweden, an educational video for children featuring dancing genitals has become an online hit — and even drawn criticism for not being progressive enough.

    Dancing Genitals Video For Kids' Show Not Progressive Enough For Some Swedes

    What's New In Snow Removal, From Heated Cables To Battery-Charged Blowers

    What's New In Snow Removal, From Heated Cables To Battery-Charged Blowers
    Metal shovels scraping snow-covered driveways and sidewalks. The industrious whir of snow blowers. The grating sound of scrapers chiseling cars out from beneath layers of ice.

    What's New In Snow Removal, From Heated Cables To Battery-Charged Blowers

    Learning To Knit Can Be Easy, And There's Plenty Of Help Available In Classes, Books, Videos

    Learning To Knit Can Be Easy, And There's Plenty Of Help Available In Classes, Books, Videos
    NEW YORK — When you're stuck inside during a long, cold winter, working on a knitting project can be fun and rewarding. And although sweaters and lacy shawls can seem daunting, knitting is a fairly easy hobby to get started on.

    Learning To Knit Can Be Easy, And There's Plenty Of Help Available In Classes, Books, Videos

    Hatmaker Alex Tilley Says It Would Be 'Foolish' To Make His Hats Outside Canada

    Hatmaker Alex Tilley Says It Would Be 'Foolish' To Make His Hats Outside Canada
    TORONTO — Alex Tilley, the man who created one of Canada's most-prized outdoor wear companies, says it would be foolish to take the manufacturing of Tilley hats outside Canada.

    Hatmaker Alex Tilley Says It Would Be 'Foolish' To Make His Hats Outside Canada

    Earth's earliest primates lived on trees

    Earth's earliest primates lived on trees
    By analysing 65-million-year-old ankle bones, paleontologists from Yale University have found that Earths earliest primates were tree dwellers....

    Earth's earliest primates lived on trees