To critically examine neuroscientific knowledge production and to develop differentiated approaches for a more gender adequate neuroscientific research.
The NeuroGenderings Network is an international group of researchers in neuroscience and gender studies.[1] Members of the network study how the complexities of social norms, varied life experiences, details of laboratory conditions and biology interact to affect the results of neuroscientific research.[2] Working under the label of "neurofeminism", they aim to critically analyze how the field of neuroscience operates, and to build an understanding of brain and gender that goes beyond gender essentialism while still treating the brain as fundamentally material.[3][4][5] Its founding was part of a period of increased interest and activity in interdisciplinary research connecting neuroscience and the social sciences.[6]
History
The group, comprising scholars who specialized in feminism, queer theory and gender studies, formed to tackle "neurosexism"[3] as defined by Cordelia Fine in her 2010 book Delusions of Gender: "uncritical biases in [neuroscientific] research and public perception, and their societal impacts on an individual, structural, and symbolic level."[7] Research can suffer from neurosexism by failing to include the social factors and expectations that shape sex differences, which possibly leads to making inferences based on flawed data.
By contrast, the network members advocate "neurofeminism",[8] aiming to critically evaluate heteronormative assumptions of contemporary brain research and examine the impact and cultural significance of neuroscientific research on society's views about gender.[3][9] This includes placing greater emphasis on neuroplasticity rather than biological determinism.[3][10]
Conferences
In March 2010, the first conference – NeuroGenderings: Critical Studies of the Sexed Brain – was held in Uppsala, Sweden.[11][12][13] Organisers Anelis Kaiser and Isabelle Dussauge described its long terms goals "to elaborate a new conceptual approach of the relation between gender and the brain, one that could help to head gender theorists and neuroscientists to an innovative interdisciplinary place, far away from social and biological determinisms but still engaging with the materiality of the brain."[14] The NeuroGenderings Network was established at this event,[3][15] with the group's first results published in a special issue of the journal Neuroethics.[16][17]
Bluhm, Robyn; Maibom, Heidi Lene; Jaap Jacobson, Anne (2012). Neurofeminism: issues at the intersection of feminist theory and cognitive science. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN9780230296732. Also available to view by chapter online.
Schmitz, Sigrid; Höppner, Grit, eds. (2014). Gendered neurocultures: feminist and queer perspectives on current brain discourses. challenge GENDER, 2. Wien: Zaglossus. ISBN9783902902122.
Rippon, Gina (2019). Gender and Our Brains: How New Neuroscience Explodes the Myths of the Male and Female Minds. New York: Knopf Doubleday. ISBN9781524747039.
Book chapters
Kaiser, Anelis (2010). "Sex/Gender and neuroscience: focusing on current research". In Blomqvist, Martha; Ehnsmyr, Ester (eds.). Never mind the gap! Gendering science in transgressive encounters. Uppsala Sweden: Skrifter från Centrum för genusvetenskap. University Printers. pp. 189–210. ISBN9789197818636.
Schmitz, Sigrid (2014). "Sex, gender, and the brain – biological determinism versus socio-cultural constructivism". In Klinge, Ineke; Wiesemann, Claudia (eds.). Sex and gender in biomedicine: theories, methodologies, results. Akron, Ohio: University Of Akron Press. pp. 57–76. ISBN9781935603689.
Kaiser, Anelis; Dussauge, Isabelle (2014). "Re-queering the brain". In Bluhm, Robyn; Japp Jacobson, Anne; Maibom, Heidi Lene (eds.). Neurofeminism: issues at the intersection of feminist theory and cognitive science. Hampshire New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 121–144. ISBN9781349333929.
Below is a list of works which cause the network concern due to their "neurodeterminist notions of a ‘sexed brain’ [which] are being transported into public discourse [..] without reflecting the biases in empirical work."[29]
^Bluhm, Robyn; Maibom, Heidi Lene; Jaap Jacobson, Anne (2012). Neurofeminism: issues at the intersection of feminist theory and cognitive science. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN9780230296732.
^Kaiser, Anelis; Dussauge, Isabelle (2014). "Re-queering the brain". In Bluhm, Robyn; Jacobson, Anne Jaap; Maibom, Heidi Lene (eds.). Neurofeminism: issues at the intersection of feminist theory and cognitive science. Hampshire New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 121–144. ISBN9781349333929.