University of Cambridge
  • Study at Cambridge
  • About the University
  • Research at Cambridge
Quick links
  • For staff
  • For current students
  • For alumni
  • For business
  • Colleges & departments
  • Libraries & facilities
  • Museums & collections
  • Email & phone search
Search

Log in | Join

Cambridge Neuroscience

  • Home
  • About
    • Governance
    • Neuroscience in Cambridge
    • Introduction by Andrew Huxley
    • A short history
    • Privacy Policy
  • Research & Collaboration
    • Research themes
    • Collaboration in action
    • Publications
  • Directory
    • Search
    • Principal investigators
    • All members
    • Departments
    • Institutes
    • Popular keywords
  • News, Events & Seminars
    • Seminars
    • Latest news
    • Events news
    • Public Engagement news
    • News archive
    • CamNeuro events
    • CamNeuro events archive
  • Information
    • Job applicants
    • Prospective students
    • Current students
    • Researchers
    • Current vacancies
    • Media
  • Vacancies
  • Contact us
  • Cambridge Neuroscience
  • About us
    • Governance
    • Neuroscience in Cambridge
    • Introduction by Andrew Huxley
    • A short history
    • Privacy Policy
  • Research and Collaboration
    • Research themes
    • Collaboration in action
    • Publications
  • Directory
    • Search
    • Principal investigators
    • All members
    • Departments
    • Institutes
    • Popular keywords
  • News, events and seminars
    • Seminars
    • Latest news
    • Events news
    • Public Engagement news
    • News archive
    • CamNeuro events
    • CamNeuro events archive
  • Information for...
    • Job applicants
    • Prospective students
    • Current students
    • Researchers
    • Media
    • Vacancies
    • Join
    • Log in
    • Contact us

News

Bookmark and Share

This article is in the news archive.

The Neuroeconomics of the City

Gender inequality has been an issue in the City for years, but now the new science of 'neuroeconomics' is proving the point beyond doubt: hormonally-driven young men should not be left alone in charge of our finances.

Cambridge Neuroscientist, John Coates, PhD, based at the Judge Buisness School, University of Cambridge, pictured right, working with Professor Joe Herbert, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, pictured left, talk to the Guardian and Time out to explain the brain biology behind this phenomenom.

To access the articles and find out more about John's research please click on the links:

Guardian Magazine

Time Magazine

Posted on 30/06/2011

Further news

Go to the news index page.

Cambridge Neuroscience Coordinator

For information about Cambridge Neuroscience please contact

Dr Dervila Glynn

coordinator@neuroscience.cam.ac.uk

Cambridge Neuroscience Newsletter

If you have an account, log in and check your preferences.

Otherwise create an account now and then choose your preferred email format.

University of Cambridge

© 2022 University of Cambridge

  • University A-Z
  • Contact the University
  • Accessibility
  • Freedom of information
  • Terms and conditions

Study at Cambridge

  • Undergraduate
  • Graduate
  • International students
  • Continuing education
  • Executive and professional education
  • Courses in education

About the University

  • How the University and Colleges work
  • Visiting the University
  • Map
  • News
  • Events
  • Jobs
  • Giving to Cambridge

Research at Cambridge

  • News
  • Features
  • Discussion
  • Spotlight on...
  • About research at Cambridge