It seems like there used to be more of these “look at these interesting results” type discussions but are fewer now that just posting things can upset people and gather lots of folks meta debating instead of digging into knowledge development and understanding.
[0]https://twitter.com/paulg/status/1476550040135024648?lang=da
Is that because of STEM or academic career inclination vs. general giftedness? Or is it just pointing to a small sample and not statistically significant?
This chart is quite difficult to read, and it's not clear how the data was collected or what amount of overlap exists between the people in each category. Also, what were the sample sizes? Are the men and women in approximately the same careers? These are preferences; were individuals asked to rank preferences or did they rate each preference independently? What does a standard deviation mean here (units)?
I take the display to mean that, for example, the sampled profoundly gifted women prefer to have satisfaction in their work much more than the sampled profoundly gifted men. Or does it mean that women rank satisfaction over other items more than men but they really do care equally about satisfaction in a nominal sense?
Can anyone else chime in on their interpretation?
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EDIT: Link to study
What do you think of the data being presented here?
How would one go about designing a study that eliminates the variable of social conditioning when trying to study sociological differences between the sexes, or is that even important to indicate these sentiments are/aren't linked to biology?
(seems like paulg got the chart from this guy's tweet, which refers to the article I link above, which is informed by the study you linked to)
men wearing makeup has a long and fascinating history from ancient times, to the Middle Ages, renaissance, 19th and 20th centuries, and the modern resurgence.
Look up the gender equality paradox in Nordic countries. Nordic countries are the most egalitarian countries in the world that offer the best equal opportunities for men and women. The initial conclusions were that as Nordic countries made opportunities for either gender more equal the differences in choice for careers between genders became more pronounced.
There's various cooked interpretations of the result from agenda based groups but those are the initial results. This person illustrates the whole study the best:
https://youtu.be/_iudkPi4_sY?si=DPtr46-vw94sa70v
It's hard to draw a definitive conclusion from the study due to all the controversy and various parties cooking the numbers for their own agenda but take from it what you will, but the initial conclusion was that most of this is biological.
Also you added the word "overweight". I never said I was overweight. You calling me fat? I'm Offended.
For example, I think lots of fashion is some factor of culture and not biology. That’s why costumes are different in Germany than China.
And there are things that are biology (height, etc). It’s interesting to find what’s nature and what’s nurture.