测量一所小型和一所大型院校本科生胼胝体的性别差异。

Cary H Leung, Imrin Goraya, Leena Kasa, Natalie Schottler, William Grisham
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引用次数: 0

摘要

神经科学专业的学生通常对涉及人脑的实验练习反应更快。在此,我们介绍一个实验室,该实验室利用人脑核磁共振成像来评估关于人脑(特别是胼胝体)是否存在性别差异的长期争论。威德恩大学和加州大学洛杉矶分校的学生按照威特森(1989 年)或霍弗和弗拉姆(2006 年)的描述,测量了已经标记好的胼胝体亚区。统计分析显示,在校正了躯干皮层的大小后,这两种方法都存在性别差异。不过,威德恩的学生比加州大学洛杉矶分校的学生发现了更多的性别差异。加州大学洛杉矶分校学生的实验教学发生在 COVID-19 大流行期间。因此,实验课完全是在线进行的。相比之下,威德恩大学的学生则享受到了面对面实验教学的好处。尽管如此,从语料库 Callosi 图像中获得的数据以及对教学效果的衡量标准在两所院校之间都是相似的,这表明远程学习可能是一种有价值的可行选择。此外,当无法进行面对面学习时,例如在大流行病期间,数字数据库可作为在线学习的宝贵资源。在假设驱动的研究环境中使用这些数据库时,它们可以作为基于课程的本科生研究体验(CURE)的基础,众所周知,这将使学生受益--提高他们在科学领域的保留率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Measuring Sex Differences in the Corpus Callosum by Undergraduates at a Small and a Large Institution.

Neuroscience students often seem more responsive to laboratory exercises that involve human brains. Here we describe a lab that utilizes human brain MRIs to evaluate a long-standing debate over the presence of sex differences in the human brain, specifically the corpus callosum. Students at both Widener and UCLA measured corpus callosum subregions that were already marked-off as described by Witelson (1989) or by Hofer and Frahm (2006). Statistical analyses revealed sex differences using both schemes after correcting for the size of the midsagittal cortex. Widener students, however, uncovered more sex differences than the UCLA students. Lab instruction for UCLA students occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic. So, lab sessions were completely online. In contrast, Widener students had the benefit of in-person lab instruction. Nonetheless, both the data obtained from the images of the corpus callosi as well as measures of pedagogical efficacy were similar between the two institutions, suggesting that distance learning may be a valuable and viable option. Further, when in person learning is not an option, such as during a pandemic, digital databases serve as invaluable resources for online learning. When these databases are utilized in a hypothesis driven research setting, they can serve as the basis for course-based undergraduate research experiences (CUREs), which are known to benefit students-improving retention in science fields.

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