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Publication : Sex differences in learning and memory in mice: effects of sequence of testing and cholinergic blockade.

First Author  Berger-Sweeney J Year  1995
Journal  Behav Neurosci Volume  109
Issue  5 Pages  859-73
PubMed ID  8554711 Mgi Jnum  J:29826
Mgi Id  MGI:77342 Doi  10.1037//0735-7044.109.5.859
Citation  Berger-Sweeney J, et al. (1995) Sex differences in learning and memory in mice: effects of sequence of testing and cholinergic blockade. Behav Neurosci 109(5):859-73
abstractText  Sexual dimorphism in spatial and cued navigation using the Morris water maze was examined in C57BL/6 mice both with and without administration of scopolamine, a cholinergic blocker. In Exp. 1, female and male mice learned to perform first a spatial, then a cued, navigation task. Both performed a spatial task similarly; males, however, performed a cued task better than females. In Exp. 2, the sequence of navigation testing was reversed. Both performed similarly on a cued task; however, males performed a spatial task better than females. In both experiments, females were more sensitive than males to the effects of scopolamine. No significant confounding sex differences were found in either spontaneous activity or passive avoidance retention. These data indicate that sex differences in spatial and cued tasks are dependent on the sequence of task presentation and implicate a role for the cholinergic system in these differences.
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