The woman's brain is more active than men's, says the study

The findings can help to explain why women are more vulnerable to anxiety, depression, insomnia, and eating disorders, followed in Albanian Periscope study by clinics Amen in California is the largest brain study ever. He has compared more than 46 thousand hits to [...]
Finding can help to explain why women are more vulnerable to anxiety, depression, insomnia, and eating disorders, followed by Periscope
Research by scientists from the Amen Clinic in California is the largest brain study ever. It has compared more than 46 thousand brain scans from nine clinics and analyzed the differences between the brain of women and men.
Understanding these differences is important, researchers say, because it sheds light on how brain disorders affect women and men differently.
For example, women are more diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, depression, and anxiety until men experience higher rates of disorder that lead to lack of concentration (ADHD) and behavioral disorders.
Researchers have analyzed 119 brain scans of healthy volunteers and 26,683 cases of patients with a series of psychiatric disorders, such as trauma, bipolarity, schizophrenics, and other psychiatric disorders as well as ADD.
However, the human brain, regardless of gender, is constantly changing and is extremely difficult to understand.












