• Sex in the medical machine: How algorithms can entrench bioessentialism in precision medicine.
    with Marion Boulicault, Kelsey Ichikawa, Marina DiMarco, Audrey Murchland, Ben Maldonado, Abigail S. Higgins, and Sarah Richardson
    Big Data and Society 12 (4). 2025.
    Machine learning offers new possibilities for developing more precise diagnostics and treatments, but the increasing use of sex stratification in precision medicine algorithms raises concerns. Using Alzheimer's disease (AD) research as an example in which machine learning approaches are applied to a heterogenous, socially patterned disease, this paper examines how the move toward sex-specific “pink” and “blue” algorithms reinforces biological sex essentialist assumptions and their attendant harm…Read more
  •  41
    Three maxims for countering sex essentialism in scientific research
    with Marion Boulicault, Annika Gompers, Lauren Aalami, Ann Caroline Danielsen, Emily C. Dore, Patricia Homan, Katharine M. N. Lee, Miriam Miyagi, Hannah Niederriter, Atlas Sanogo, Maayan Sudai, and Sarah S. Richardson
    Biology of Sex Differences 16 (83). 2025.
    To explain observed disparities in health outcomes between men and women, sex essentialist approaches assign causal primacy to sex-related biology. In this essay, we present three case studies to illustrate how sex essentialism can distort human biomedical research and distill three maxims for countering this distortion: (1) engage in responsible citation practices; (2) generate and weigh alternative hypotheses for apparent observations of sex differences; (3) take care in constructing the appro…Read more
  •  37
    The double historicity of sex and gender
    Archives of Sexual Behavior 54 (10). 2025.
    How many sexes are there? How many genders? Answering these questions is not just challenging: It is about as silly as trying to determine how many kinds of stories or how many species there are: Where? And when? And, most importantly, in what sense? Instead, I suggest taking a closer look at the double historicity of phenomena and concepts of sex/gender: Research concepts of sex and gender are context-dependent, plural, and historically dynamic; and so are the phenomena that these concepts refe…Read more
  •  34
    Het onbehagen van mannen
    with Veronica Vasterling
    Wijsgerig Perspectief 58 (3): 32-41. 2018.
    Amsterdam University Press is a leading publisher of academic books, journals and textbooks in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Our aim is to make current research available to scholars, students, innovators, and the general public. AUP stands for scholarly excellence, global presence, and engagement with the international academic community.
  •  26
    Genders as genres: Understanding dynamic categories
    Tijdschrift Voor Genderstudies 26 (2): 203-206. 2023.
  •  40
    Sex-Gender in Life-Science Research: Conceptual Renegotiations and an Enactivist Vision
    In Annabelle Dufourcq, Annemie Halsema, Katrine Smiet & Karen Vintges (eds.), Purple Brains: Feminisms at the Limits of Philosophy, Radboud University Press. 2024.
    Alex Thinius, in “Sex-Gender in Life-Science Research: Conceptual Renegotiations and an Enactivist Vision,” discusses how researchers are increasingly acknowledging the urgency that the concept of “sex” be redefined. In contrast to concepts of sex-gender differences as stable and dichotomous, in current research on sex-gender, there is a growing consensus that sex is far more nuanced, variable, and interacting with gender in complex ways. The article aims to open up a research horizon for plural…Read more
  •  129
    Sex is often thought of as a straightforwardly binary categorical variable. Yet there is considerable variation in would-be sex traits; from genitals and hormones to morphology, neurology and behaviour, there is rarely if ever a categorical binary. We introduce a strategy that researchers use to deal with this variation: Individualising Variation (IV). IV involves treating non-binary and gradual variation as idiosyncratic, as individual differences rather than sex-based differences. Using the co…Read more
  •  49
    Genders as Genres: Understanding Dynamic Categories
    Dissertation, University of Amsterdam. 2021.
    What does it mean to be of a particular gender? I answer this question with an account of genders as dynamic categories, exploring the analogy between what genders are (e.g., men or women) and what genres are (e.g., Novels, Ballads, or Hip-Hop). For instance, due to its relation to other and earlier pieces, we recognize, e.g., a particular song as Hip-Hop. However, the piece will also develop that genre further. Likewise, e.g., the category of men emerges, persists and transforms through a speci…Read more
  •  103
    This paper discusses Sosa’s via media between existential relativism and absolutism. We discuss three implications of Sosa’s account which require some further clarification. First, we distinguish three alternative readings of Sosa’s account – the indexicalist, the homonymist and the (proper) relativist reading – and argue that they differ with respect to two crucial points: (a) they lead to different analyses of the lack of disagreement in existential discourse, and (b) they differ with respect…Read more