Reversal learning in gonadectomized marmosets with and without hormone replacement: are males more sensitive to punishment?
Autor: | Matthew LaClair, Agnès Lacreuse |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.drug_class Ovariectomy Physiology Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Reversal Learning Article Developmental psychology 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Cognition Punishment medicine Animals 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Testosterone 050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology Orchiectomy Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Sex Characteristics biology Behavior Animal Estradiol Working memory 05 social sciences Cognitive flexibility Callithrix Estrogens biology.organism_classification Estrogen Ovariectomized rat Androgens Female Psychology 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Sex characteristics |
Zdroj: | Animal cognition. 19(3) |
ISSN: | 1435-9456 |
Popis: | This study examined sex differences in executive function in middle-aged gonadectomized marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) with or without hormonal replacement. We tested ten castrated male (mean age 5.5 years) marmosets treated with testosterone cypionate (T, n = 5) or vehicle (n = 5) on Reversal Learning, which contributes to cognitive flexibility, and the Delayed Response task, measuring working memory. Their performance was compared to that of 11 ovariectomized females (mean age = 3.7 years) treated with Silastic capsules filled with 17-β estradiol (E2, n = 6) or empty capsules (n = 5), previously tested on the same tasks (Lacreuse et al. in J Neuroendocrinol 26:296–309, 2014. doi: 10.1111/jne.12147 ). Behavioral observations were conducted daily. Females exhibited more locomotor behaviors than males. Males and females did not differ in the number of trials taken to reach criterion on the reversals, but males had significantly longer response latencies, regardless of hormone replacement. They also had a greater number of refusals than females. Additionally, both control and T-treated males, but not females, had slower responses on incorrect trials, suggesting that males were making errors due to distraction, lack of motivation or uncertainty. Furthermore, although both males and females had slower responding following an incorrect compared to a correct trial, the sex difference in response latencies was disproportionally large following an incorrect trial. No sex difference was found in the Delayed Response task. Overall, slower response latencies in males than females during Reversal Learning, especially during and following an incorrect trial, may reflect greater sensitivity to punishment (omission of reward) and greater performance monitoring in males, compared to females. Because these differences occurred in gonadectomized animals and regardless of hormone replacement, they may be organized early in life. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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