Bra sns show siari shape and nnectns between gay bras and straight on om the oppose sex.
Contents:
- GAY BRAS STCTURED LIKE THOSE OF THE OPPOSE SEX
- BRAS OF GAY PEOPLE REMBLE THOSE OF STRAIGHT PEOPLE OF OPPOSE SEX
- STUDY SAYS BRAS OF GAY MEN AND WOMEN ARE SIAR
GAY BRAS STCTURED LIKE THOSE OF THE OPPOSE SEX
Bra sns have provid the most pellg evince yet that beg gay or straight is a blogilly fixed tra * my gay brain *
Some physil attribut of the homosexual bra remble those found the oppose sex. The imag show the amygdala heterosexual men and women (labeled HeM and HeW) and homosexual and women (labeled HoM and HoW)(Image: Natnal Amy of Scienc, PNAS). Bra sns have provid the most pellg evince yet that beg gay or straight is a blogilly fixed tra.
BRAS OF GAY PEOPLE REMBLE THOSE OF STRAIGHT PEOPLE OF OPPOSE SEX
The sns reveal that gay people, key stctur of the bra erng emotn, mood, anxiety and aggrsivens remble those straight people of the oppose sex. “This is the most robt measure so far of cerebral differenc between homosexual and heterosexual subjects, ” she says. Prev studi have also shown differenc bra archecture and activy between gay and straight people, but most relied on people’s rpons to sexualy driven cu that uld have been learned, such as ratg the attractivens of male or female fac.
First they ed MRI sns to fd out the overall volume and shap of bras a group of 90 volunteers nsistg of 25 heterosexuals and 20 homosexuals of each genr.
STUDY SAYS BRAS OF GAY MEN AND WOMEN ARE SIAR
The rults showed that straight men had asymmetric bras, wh the right hemisphere slightly larger – and the gay women also had this asymmetry.
Gay men, meanwhile, had symmetril bras like those of straight women. They found that the patterns of nnectivy gay men matched those of straight women, and vice versa (see image, above right). In straight women and gay men, the nnectns were maly to regns of the bra that manift fear as tense anxiety.
Gay men have higher rat of prsn too, she says, but ’s difficult to know whether this is down to blogy, homophobia or simply feelgs of beg “different”. “This study monstrat that homosexuals of both sex show strong cross-sex shifts bra symmetry, ” says Qazi Rahman, a leadg rearcher on sexual orientatn at Queen Mary llege, Universy of London, UK. “Paradoxilly, ’s more rmative to look at thgs that have no direct nnectn wh sexual orientatn, and that’s where this study sr, ” says Simon LeVay, a proment US thor who 1991 reported fdg differenc (pdf) a part of the bra lled the hypothalam between straight and gay men.