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Still little evidence sex differences in spatial navigation are evolutionary adaptations
(royalsocietypublishing.org)
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This study is so weird.
Okay so it sounds like a very bizarre approach to try to study this across species when species can inhabit any one of a whole universe full of behaviors and sexual differences, and the question of whether and how it happens in one of your just-happens-to-be-included species (humans) is still under some debate. Also, yes, 11 randomly selected species is way too small a number, if you were going to do that for some reason, and trying to throw humans into that multi-species analysis is just going to wind up with a muddled analysis of two distinct questions as if they were one question. Glad to see we're fixing that.
WHAT
WHYYYYYYYYYYY
I'm just gonna pick some random examples out of the text to pick on:
Yes, they can. Did they? Your title seems to indicate that you analyzed the question of whether they did, not whether they can.
You literally explained up in the preceding paragraphs a very plausible mechanism for antagonistic selection.
Why is it "most likely"? Did you test this, or you just feel it's most likely?
Etc etc. It reads like the author is hell-bent on one particular conclusion, and throwing all the "could be" and "probably"s in there to lead in that direction, instead of just analyzing one central question and seeing what the data indicate.
There are plenty of cognitive tasks where female humans score statistically higher (multitasking and attention, flying fighter planes, etc). It seems really weird to pick one where it seems like males may score higher and construct a whole Frankenstein's monster of reasons why it's really not true and anyway it's all a coincidence and it's not the result of natural selection or anything.