Scientific Blackpill (Supplemental): Difference between revisions

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Another Dutch study by Van Tilburg (2002) of adolescents found 11 to 12 year old girls to cry around 4.2 times per month, which is comparable to crying rates of adult women. This suggests that women arrest in their emotional development in their early teens. Males, on the other hand, see a steady maturation in crying behavior in their adolescence.
Another Dutch study by Van Tilburg (2002) of adolescents found 11 to 12 year old girls to cry around 4.2 times per month, which is comparable to crying rates of adult women. This suggests that women arrest in their emotional development in their early teens. Males, on the other hand, see a steady maturation in crying behavior in their adolescence.


Sex differences in adult crying are cross culturally robust. Hemert, Vingerhoets and colleges (2011) interviewed 5000 people (predominantly students) from 37 countries about their emotional reactions. He discovered that women cries between 30 and 64 times a year, while men cry between 6 and 17 times, so a sex ratio of 3.5 to 5. Cultural differences were consistently smaller than sex difference, and the difference is cross-culturally large (d = 1.0), with only Nepal, Nigeria not showing significant differences, which may be attributable to small sample sizes. The gender differences in adult crying also persisted despite changing gender role expectations between 1981 and 1996. Female neuroticism is also strongly influenced by gender-specific hormones, so the difference is mostly of biological origin (Lombardo, 2001).
Sex differences in adult crying are cross culturally robust. Hemert, Vingerhoets and colleges (2011) interviewed 5000 people (predominantly students) from 37 countries about their emotional reactions. He discovered that women cry between 30 and 64 times a year, while men cry between 6 and 17 times, so a sex ratio of 3.5 to 5. Cultural differences were consistently smaller than sex difference, and the difference is cross-culturally large (d = 1.0), with only Nepal, Nigeria not showing significant differences, which may be attributable to small sample sizes. The gender differences in adult crying also persisted despite changing gender role expectations between 1981 and 1996. Female neuroticism is also strongly influenced by gender-specific hormones, so the difference is mostly of biological origin (Lombardo, 2001).


Anne Kreamer and Mark Truss, JWT’s director of brand intelligence, conducted two national surveys on "Emotional Incidents in the Workplace Survey", ages 18-64. N = 701, in Spring 2009, published in Kraemer (2011). They found women under 45 are ''ten times'' more likely to cry at work than men 45 and older. Also, in 12 months, 41 percent of women cried at work, but only 9 percent of men, so 4.5 as likely to cry at workplace than men across all age groups.
Anne Kreamer and Mark Truss, JWT’s director of brand intelligence, conducted two national surveys on "Emotional Incidents in the Workplace Survey", ages 18-64. N = 701, in Spring 2009, published in Kraemer (2011). They found women under 45 are ''ten times'' more likely to cry at work than men 45 and older. Also, in 12 months, 41 percent of women cried at work, but only 9 percent of men, so 4.5 as likely to cry at workplace than men across all age groups.
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