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A person with high EI ability can perceive, comprehend and express emotion accurately, and also has the ability to access and generate feelings when needed to improve one's self and relationships with others. Women tend to score higher than men on measures of emotional intelligence, but gender stereotypes of men and women can affect how they ...
A 2022 meta-analysis found that even small sex-based differences in general intelligence among school-aged children were an artifact of older tests, with current test batteries showing no statistically significant difference between the sexes, but that differences in intelligence sub-types such as processing speed (favoring females) and visual ...
Current literature suggests women have higher level of social cognition. A 2012 review published in the journal Neuropsychologia found that women are better at recognizing facial effects, expression processing and emotions in general. [68] Men were only better at recognizing specific behaviour which includes anger, aggression and threatening ...
If you're not too sure about your own intellect, there are some subtle, and sometimes surprising, signs that you are considerably smarter than you think. 17 unexpected signs you have a high IQ ...
Related: 12 Signs You're In a Situationship, According to Therapists Other 2025 Dating Predictions No one is saying to delete Tinder and Bumble or to block any cuties you have in your phone thanks ...
While the relationships we build with friends, relatives, and significant others can offer us a bounty of love and support, negative or toxic relationships can take a major toll on our mental and ...
Women are known to have anatomically differently shaped tear glands than men as well as having more of the hormone prolactin, which is present in tear glands, as adults. While girls and boys cry at roughly the same amount at age 12, by age 18, women generally cry four times more than men, which could be explained by higher levels of prolactin.
Starting the ’70s, with divorce on the rise, social psychologists got into the mix. Recognizing the apparently opaque character of marital happiness but optimistic about science’s capacity to investigate it, they pioneered a huge array of inventive techniques to study what things seemed to make marriages succeed or fail.