# Sex Differences in Spatial Cognition Extend Beyond Vision: Insights From the Audio‐Corsi Test

**Authors:** Daniela E. Aguilar Ramirez, Jennifer Kane, Walter Setti, Lara Coelho, Monica Gori, Claudia L. R. Gonzalez

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/ejn.70226 · The European Journal of Neuroscience · 2025-08-12

## TL;DR

This study shows that men outperform women in both visual and auditory spatial tasks, suggesting sex differences in spatial cognition go beyond vision.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that sex differences in spatial abilities extend to auditory tasks and reveals sex-specific cognitive strategies.

## Key findings

- Males outperformed females on both the Audio-Corsi and Mental Rotation Test.
- A significant relationship between auditory and visuospatial tasks was found only among females.
- Males used holistic cognitive strategies more than females for the Audio-Corsi task.

## Abstract

Over the past several decades, substantial evidence has accumulated demonstrating sex differences in spatial abilities. Males outperform females in most visual tasks that require processing visuospatial information. Notably, in real‐world contexts, this capacity also involves other sensory modalities, such as the auditory system. However, unlike visuospatial abilities, research on sex differences in auditory spatial abilities remains sparse. The present study investigated sex differences in an auditory spatial working memory task. Seventy‐seven participants (41 female) completed the Audio‐Corsi task, the well‐established visual Mental Rotation Test (MRT), and a cognitive strategy questionnaire. Results revealed that males outperformed females on both the Audio‐Corsi and the MRT. Interestingly, a significant relationship between performance on the Audio‐Corsi and the MRT emerged, but only among females. Furthermore, to complete the Audio‐Corsi, males reported employing the use of a holistic cognitive strategy more than females. These findings demonstrate that sex differences in spatial abilities extend across sensory modalities, encompassing both auditory and visual domains. They also underscore the distinct cognitive strategies employed by males and females in spatial processing. This study contributes to a deeper understanding of sex differences in spatial cognition.

Sex differences in spatial cognition extend beyond vision. Sex differences in spatial abilities are well established using vision. But are there sex differences in spatial abilities using audition? Mental Rotation Task‐Auditory Spatial Task‐Questionnaire. Dependent Variables are as follows: MRT score, sequences (1–36), span (2–9), total score (seq*span). Training phase followed by the forward condition (recall of sequences in the same order) and backward condition (REVERSE order). Males performed better than females in the auditory spatial task. The relationships between auditory and visuospatial tasks are sex‐specific.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** IBM (MESH:D018979), Mental Rotation (MESH:D008607), hearing impairments (MESH:D034381), visual or auditory impairments (MESH:D014786), MRT (MESH:D013736)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12341362/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12341362