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Do Men and Women Engage with Apps Differently? What Science Says About Gender and UX

Are men's and women’s brains really different when it comes to app usage? Science suggests subtle cognitive differences — women excel at verbal tasks, men at spatial ones. Learn what this means for UX and how personalization can drive better engagement.

Irena Jeftović Velkova

Irena Jeftović Velkova

MD neurologist

·Sep 22, 2025·2 min read
Do Men and Women Engage with Apps Differently? What Science Says About Gender and UX

When designing digital experiences, one of the most overlooked factors is how different demographics engage with content. A key demographic distinction is gender — not in a stereotypical sense, but in how biology and cognition may shape user behavior.

I was reminded of this during a seminar I attended a few years ago on the differences between men’s and women’s brains. While culture and society strongly influence interests, there are also neurobiological foundations at play.

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We know so much about the brain — and yet, so little.

From the earliest stages of development — even before birth — exposure to sex hormones influences how the brain forms. This impacts not only gender identity but also cognitive functioning later in life. And since cognition drives how we process information, learn, and interact, it naturally influences how we use apps, games, and digital platforms.

Cognitive Differences: What Research Shows

  • Verbal vs. Spatial Abilities: Women tend to perform better on most verbal tasks, while men often outperform women on visual-spatial tasks.

  • Attention and Memory: Subtle differences in working memory and cognitive flexibility may affect how quickly users switch between tasks or process new information.

  • Implications for UX: Apps designed with women in mind may benefit from leaning on verbal cues, narrative elements, and structured information, while apps targeting men might emphasize visual, spatial, and interactive challenges.

Of course, these are averages, not rules. Not every man or woman fits this pattern. But as designers and product teams, understanding these cognitive tendencies can help us create more inclusive and engaging products.

Why This Matters for Product Design

If gender can shape cognitive engagement, it’s worth asking: are we designing apps that unintentionally favor one group over another?

For example:

  • Health apps geared toward women may succeed with guided text flows and conversational AI.

  • Strategy games targeting men might see better retention with map-based visuals, navigation puzzles, or spatial reasoning challenges.

Instead of thinking in stereotypes, the real takeaway is personalization. By analyzing real usage patterns, we can adapt content delivery — whether verbal or spatial — to best fit each user.

At Moveo One, we may not solve the age-old debate of brain differences. But what we can do is measure how different people actually interact with your app — regardless of gender. Our cognitive analytics help identify bottlenecks, predict friction, and optimize UX so every user feels engaged.

Sources:

[PubMed] Sexual differentiation of the human brain in relation to gender identity and sexual orientation

[NLM - National Library of Medicine] Sex/Gender Differences in Verbal Fluency and Verbal-Episodic Memory: A Meta-Analysis

[ScienceDirect] Sex differences in cognitive functions

#UXDesign #AppEngagement #CognitiveScience #GenderDifferences #ProductAnalytics #MoveoOne #NeuroUX #DigitalExperience #UserBehavior #AIUX