کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5043283 | 1475140 | 2016 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Animal studies show that estrogen affects female navigation strategies.
- We assessed ego- and allocentric navigation in 30 pregnant and 30 non-pregnant women.
- Brain structure was measured shortly after delivery and compared between the groups.
- Pregnant women performed worse in ego- but not allocentric navigation.
- Striatal volume was smaller in women that had been pregnant.
Pregnancy is accompanied by prolonged exposure to high estrogen levels. Animal studies have shown that estrogen influences navigation strategies and, hence, affects navigation performance. High estrogen levels are related to increased use of hippocampal-based allocentric strategies and decreased use of striatal-based egocentric strategies. In humans, associations between hormonal shifts and navigation strategies are less well studied. This study compared 30 peripartal women (mean age 28Â years) to an age-matched control group on allocentric versus egocentric navigation performance (measured in the last month of pregnancy) and gray matter volume (measured within two months after delivery). None of the women had a previous pregnancy before study participation. Relative to controls, pregnant women performed less well in the egocentric condition of the navigation task, but not the allocentric condition. A whole-brain group comparison revealed smaller left striatal volume (putamen) in the peripartal women. Across the two groups, left striatal volume was associated with superior egocentric over allocentric performance. Limited by the cross-sectional study design, the findings are a first indication that human pregnancy might be accompanied by structural brain changes in navigation-related neural systems and concomitant changes in navigation strategy.
Journal: Neurobiology of Learning and Memory - Volume 134, Part B, October 2016, Pages 400-407