Background: e cerebellum is divided into two hemispheres and contains a narrow midline zone called thevermis. A set of large folds are conventionally used to divide the overall structure into ten smaller "lobules". evermis receives fibres from the trunk and proximal portions of limbs, But the question is that does the cerebellum have the same measurementvalues in males and females of the same age?Material and method: e present study used 80 sectional brain MRI images (40: males, 40: females); 35-50 years old as indices of size for thevermian structures of the Cerebellum. is middle age group was taken because as known generally it could be neither an age of growth as inthe young nor of atrophy as in old individuals. e aim regarding the gender differences was whether, in the healthy middle age individuals, thecerebellar vermis and its lobules show different height and width measurements in the males and the females.Results and discussion: e results revealed that there is a strong significant difference in which the males' vermis is larger than the females'in this specific sectional MRI study. Moreover, these results might help to address controversies in the study of sexual dimorphisms andasymmetric patterns in human cerebellum (PDF) cerebellar vermis. Available from: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/364242212_cerebellar_vermis [accessed Oct 30 2024].