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support specifically because it is a comprehensive tool effective at detecting and predicting numerous health outcomes. In this chapter, we have explored the diverse antecedents and consequences of increased AL that are influenced by sex and gender throughout the life cycle. Such interactions force us to reconsider how dichotomous and dimensional variables coexist to affect a wide spectrum of behaviors, cognitions, and lifelong propensities of health and well-being. In an effort to promote person-centered approaches, we have outlined a simple formula to calculate a clinical AL index that could be effectively combined with other interdisciplinary methods. While treatment options are needed, an AL index can guide medical professionals towards preventive strategies that respect vast inter-and intraindividual differences.
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Sonia J. Lupien, PhD
Center for Studies on Human Stress, Fernand-Seguin Research Center
Louis-H. Lafontaine Hospital
7401 Hochelaga Street
Montreal, QC, H1N 3M5 (Canada)
Tel. +1 514 251 4015, E-Mail [email protected]
Central Nervous System and Clinical Applications
Schenck-Gustafsson K, DeCola PR, Pfaff DW, Pisetsky DS (eds): Handbook of Clinical Gender Medicine.
Basel, Karger, 2012, pp 82–91
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Rebecca Knickmeyera · Simon Baron-Cohenb
aDepartment of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, N.C., USA; bAutism Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
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Abstract
One of the most striking features of autism spectrum conditions (ASC) is that they occur significantly more often in males than in females. Despite this dramatic