An Inquiry into the Possible Existence of Internal Differences Correlated With A Morphological Dimorphism in the Terrestrial Species Homo sapiens, with Some Considerations of Methodology

by
Paige Cunningham, Rachel Derber, Ariana Lamb, Jessica Miller, Kate DiFelice, Kate Kaczmarek, Faye McGrath, Crystal Nicodemus, Cassandra Phillips, Sonam Tamang, Ariel Velez, Cindy Zhan, and I.M. Cogito

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Background

Humans exhibit morphological differences which, while overlapping, tend to subdivide the species into two identifiable groups ("female" and "male"): Many humans readily identify each other (and themselves) using the dichotomous terms "female" and "male"

Anthropological observations suggest the possibilty that females engage in substantial internal information processing ("thinking") prior to their actions, whiles males may not

Hypothesis to be tested:

Females think, males don't