4.1 Review

Neuroimaging studies in people with gender incongruence

Journal

INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF PSYCHIATRY
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 120-128

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.3109/09540261.2015.1113163

Keywords

Gender dysphoria; sexual differentiation; cross-sex hormone treatment; organizing effects; activating effects; gender identity development; transgender; transsexual

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [PSI2014-58004-P]

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The current review gives an overview of brain studies in transgender people. First, we describe studies into the aetiology of feelings of gender incongruence, primarily addressing the sexual differentiation hypothesis: does the brain of transgender individuals resemble that of their natal sex, or that of their experienced gender? Findings from neuroimaging studies focusing on brain structure suggest that the brain phenotypes of trans women (MtF) and trans men (FtM) differ in various ways from control men and women with feminine, masculine, demasculinized and defeminized features. The brain phenotypes of people with feelings of gender incongruence may help us to figure out whether sex differentiation of the brain is atypical in these individuals, and shed light on gender identity development. Task-related imaging studies may show whether brain activation and task performance in transgender people is sex-atypical. Second, we review studies that evaluate the effects of cross-sex hormone treatment on the brain. This type of research provides knowledge on how changes in sex hormone levels may affect brain structure and function.

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