
Fine's book is a remarkably researched and dense work that, even while tackling highly complex subject manner, retains a light, breezy touch. Women aren't worse at math (as Fine proves in the book, bad neurological research is one of the reasons women are still struggling to catch up in the field), and girls' preference for girlish toys probably has more to do with social expectations than what's in their skulls.


In her new book, "Delusions of Gender: How Our Minds, Society, and Neurosexism Create Difference," Cordelia Fine, a research associate and the author of "A Mind of Its Own" (also about brain science), discovers that, far from supporting the existence of vastly different male and female brains, much of the research on the topic is not only deeply flawed, but dangerously misleading. It's why they're so good at housework! (Men are more wired to focus on one task - like arithmetic.) At least that's what a host of recent studies in the field of neuroscience have argued. It's why women gravitate toward dolls and tea sets as young children, and why they're so much better at understanding other people's emotions. Women's brains are wired differently from men's.
