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Volume 2 Issue 4, April 2024

Sex and the brain across the lifespan

How the brain changes as a function of sex and as we age are profound and relatively under-researched questions. The April cover challenges us to consider the maturation stages that make up the developmental trajectory over the lifespan and suggest the different windows of time in which the interplay of systems is especially salient, such as neuroendocrine function and puberty.

See our Editorial for more insights into sex and the brain across the lifespan.

Image and cover design: Debbie Maizels

Editorial

  • Reporting, discussing and interpreting sex differences in clinical and biomedical research has become a more complicated task in recent years, but necessarily so. Achieving clarity around what constitutes sex and what is associated with gender provides few conclusive answers and far more questions. As cogently expressed by Beans Velocci, a historian of sex and science, in a recent piece in Cell on sex as a scientific category, “…because it is so many things at once, all we can say for sure about what sex is is what a given scientist does with it” (B. Velocci, Cell 187, 1343–1346; 2024).

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