RSS

Religiosity is associated with a more feminine intelligence profile in men

09 Sep

Many studies have found a small negative correlation between religiousness and intelligence measured by IQ tests, and many others have found that females are more religious than males. Still other studies have demonstrated that the IQ profile of females is different from that of males, with females tending to be higher than males in some abilities and lower in others. This raises the intriguing question of whether religiousness may be correlated with a more stereotypically female intelligence profile. We tested whether this was the case using the NLSY 79 (N = 12,686). The NLSY shows that religiousness, using the proxy of regular church attendance, is not only higher among females but is also associated with a female profile of abilities even among males (r = 0.92). We argue that this is potentially consistent with evidence that Autism Spectrum Disorder is negatively associated with religiosity.

Read more at Science Direct

 
Comments Off on Religiosity is associated with a more feminine intelligence profile in men

Posted by on September 9, 2021 in cognitive science, religion

 

Comments are closed.

 
NeuroLogica Blog

Your Daily Fix of Neuroscience, Skepticism, and Critical Thinking

The Wandering Scientist

What a lovely world it is

NT Blog

My ὑπομνήματα about religion

PsyPost

Reporting the latest scientific research on behavior, cognition and society

PsyBlog

Understand your mind with the science of psychology -

Vridar

Musings on biblical studies, politics, religion, ethics, human nature, tidbits from science

Maximum Entropy

My ὑπομνήματα about religion

My ὑπομνήματα about religion

My ὑπομνήματα about religion

Skepticism, Properly Applied

Dissent is Critical and Necessary

Download PDF

My ὑπομνήματα about religion

Research Digest

My ὑπομνήματα about religion

Disrupting Dinner Parties

Feminism is for everyone!

My ὑπομνήματα about religion

The New Oxonian

Religion and Culture for the Intellectually Impatient

AwayPoint

Between An Island of Certainties and the Unknown Shore