a psychiatric condition where a person feels distress with the gender assigned to them at birth (this does not include intersex conditions)
what are some biological explanations of gender dysphoria?
transsexualgene
brainsex theory
phantomlimb and crosswiring
environmental effects- pesticides
how does the transsexual gene explain gender dysphoria?
Hare et al
looked at DNA of 112MtF transsexuals
found they were more likely to have a longer version of the androgenreceptor gene than the control group
the effect of this longer gene = reduced action of testosterone which may have an effect on pre-natal gender development
what is brain sex theory?
the idea that male and female brains are different and that maybe transsexuals brains do not match their genetic sex
Zhou et al
found that the number of neurones in the BSTc (and therefore its size) correlated with a persons preferredsex rather than their biological one
FtM transsexuals had a number of neurones in the male range and vice versa
how does phantom limb + cross wiring explain gender dysphoria?
Ramachandran and McGeoch
suggested that phantomlimbsyndrome occurs because the brain is 'crosswired' and the part of the brain receiving inputs for an amputated part of the body is takenover by another part such as your cheek, thus you feel sensation where you do not have a limb
in gender dysphoria: the sex organs are innately hardwired into the brain which are opposite to a persons biological sex
2/3 of FtM transsexuals report the sensation of a phantom penis from childhood onwards
how do environmental effects explain gender dysphoria?
environmental effects eg pesticides which contain oestrogen which may mean that males are prenatally exposed to high levels of female hormones which cause a mismatch between genitals and hormone levels
what are the social explanations of gender dysphoria?
mentalillness
mother-son relationships
father-daughter relationships
how does mental illness explain gender dysphoria?
belief that mental illness, related to childhoodtrauma or maladaptive thinking relates to gender dysphoria
Coates et al
case of a boy who developed genderdysphoria + proposed that this was a defensive reaction to his mothers depression after an abortion
the trauma occured when he was 3
suggests the trauma led to a cross-genderfantasy to resolve his anxiety
how do mother-son relationships explain gender dysphoria?
Stoller
observed that people diagnosed with gender dysphoria had overly close mother-son relationships, leading to greater femaleidentification and confused gender identity
how do father daughter relationships explain gender dysphoria?
Zucker
suggested females identify as males due to severepaternal rejection in early childhood
they unconsciously think that if they become males they might gain acceptance from their father
criticism of the brain sex theory
Chung et al noticed that differences in BSTc volume did not develop until adulthood
most transsexuals report feelings of gender dysphoria from early childhood
suggesting that instead of being the cause, a difference in BSTc is as a result of transsexualism
support of brain sex theory
Rametti et al
studied brains of FtM transsexuals before hormone therapy
in terms of white matter, FtM individuals had more similar patterns to Males than females (gender identity vs biological sex)
support for cross-wiring
Ramachandran and McGeoch
60% of non-gender-dysphoric men with penile amputations experience a phantom penis
30% of genderdysphoric men experience phantom penis after an amputation, suggesting there was no wiring to a 'penis representation' in their brain in the first place
10% of FtM patients experience phantom breast sensations after surgery
problems with gender dysphoria research
socially sensitive
could have social consequences on transsexuals
are they better off with or without the research?
if a biological cause is identified, people may be more accepting of them but it may harm individuals because they may assume it is inevitable and determinist
support for social explanations
zucker et al
64% of boys with gender dysphoria were also diagnosed with separation anxiety compared to only 38% of boys who had gender concerns but symptoms were subclinical
evidence against social explanations
Cole et al
435 gender dysphoric individuals and reported the range of mental conditions was no greater than in a 'normal' population
a problem with research into gender dysphoria
more research is needed because different types of gender dysphoria seem to be apparent
blanchard suggested 2 groups:
homosexual transsexuals who wish to change sex because they are attacted to men (MtF)
non-homosexual transsexual who wish to change sex because they are autogynephillic