Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Sex differences" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Biological sex and bilingualism: Its impact on risk and resilience for dementia Calvo N; Phillips N; Bialystok E; Einstein G; 41573422
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Contextual use of male-male social information by Trinidadian guppies Brusseau AJP; Dumaresq-Synnott F; Morris J; Nagl AC; Ramnarine IW; Crane AL; Brown GE; 41460359
BIOLOGY
3 Antipredator decisions of male Trinidadian guppies ( em Poecilia reticulata /em ) depend on social cues from females Brusseau AJP; Feyten LEA; Crane AL; Ramnarine IW; Ferrari MCO; Brown GE; 40264715
BIOLOGY
4 Sex and APOE4-specific links between cardiometabolic risk factors and white matter alterations in individuals with a family history of Alzheimer s disease Tremblay SA; Nathan Spreng R; Wearn A; Alasmar Z; Pirhadi A; Tardif CL; Chakravarty MM; Villeneuve S; Leppert IR; Carbonell F; Medina YI; Steele CJ; Gauthier CJ; 40086421
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Sex differences in the metabolism of glucose and fatty acids by adipose tissue and skeletal muscle in humans Costa DN; Santosa S; Jensen MD; 39869194
SOH
6 Learning processes in relapse to alcohol use: lessons from animal models Valyear MD; LeCocq MR; Brown A; Villaruel FR; Segal D; Chaudhri N; 36264342
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Sexually dimorphic role of circadian clock genes in alcohol drinking behavior Nuria de Zavalia 36184679
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Supplementary dataset of context-dependent conditioned responding to an alcohol-predictive cue in female and male rats Segal D; Valyear MD; Chaudhri N; 35330738
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Depression, Estrogens, and Neuroinflammation: A Preclinical Review of Ketamine Treatment for Mood Disorders in Women Gagne C; Piot A; Brake WG; 35115970
CSBN
10 Profiles of Anxious and Depressive Symptoms Among Adolescent Boys and Girls: Associations with Coping Strategies Olivier E; Morin AJS; Tardif-Grenier K; Archambault I; Dupéré V; Hébert C; 35038084
CONCORDIA
11 The role of context on responding to an alcohol-predictive cue in female and male rats Segal D; Valyear MD; Chaudhri N; 34742865
PSYCHOLOGY
12 The Biology of Vasopressin. Sparapani S, Millet-Boureima C, Oliver J, Mu K, Hadavi P, Kalostian T, Ali N, Avelar CM, Bardies M, Barrow B, Benedikt M, Biancardi G, Bindra R, Bui L, Chihab Z, Cossitt A, Costa J, Daigneault T, Dault J, Davidson I, Dias J, Dufour E, El-Khoury S, Farhangdoost N, Forget A, Fox A, Gebrael M, Gentile MC, Geraci O, Gnanapragasam A, Gomah E, Haber E, Hamel C, Iyanker T, Kalantzis C, Kamali S, Kassardjian E, Kontos HK, Le TBU, LoScerbo D, Low YF, Mac Rae D, Maurer F, Mazhar S, Nguyen A, Nguyen-Duong K, Osborne-L 33477721
BIOLOGY
13 Atrx Deletion in Neurons Leads to Sexually Dimorphic Dysregulation of miR-137 and Spatial Learning and Memory Deficits. Tamming RJ, Dumeaux V, Jiang Y, Shafiq S, Langlois L, Ellegood J, Qiu LR, Lerch JP, Bérubé NG 32610139
PERFORM
14 Sex differences in the relationship between dietary pattern adherence and cognitive function among older adults: findings from the NuAge study. D'Amico D, Parrott MD, Greenwood CE, Ferland G, Gaudreau P, Belleville S, Laurin D, Anderson ND, Kergoat MJ, Morais JA, Presse N, Fiocco AJ, 32563260
PERFORM

 

Title:The role of context on responding to an alcohol-predictive cue in female and male rats
Authors:Segal DValyear MDChaudhri N
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34742865/
DOI:10.1016/j.alcohol.2021.10.004
Publication:Alcohol (Fayetteville, N.Y.)
Keywords:AlcoholContextGoal-trackingPavlovian conditioningRatSex differences
PMID:34742865 Category: Date Added:2021-11-08
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada. Electronic address: milan.valyear@mcgill.ca.

Description:

In male rats, physical contexts that are associated with alcohol can amplify responding to a discrete, alcohol-predictive conditioned stimulus (CS), and amplify prime-induced reinstatement. Here, we examined these effects as a function of biological sex. Male and female Long-Evans rats were acclimated to drinking ethanol (15% v/v) in their home cages. Next, they were trained to associate an auditory CS (10 s; white noise or clicker; 15 trials per session) with ethanol delivery (0.2 ml per CS; 3.0 ml per session) into a fluid port for oral intake. Training occurred in a distinctive context containing specific visual, olfactory, and tactile stimuli. During alternating sessions rats were exposed to a second context wherein they did not receive ethanol. At test, CS trials occurred in both contexts without ethanol delivery. Rats then underwent extinction using repeated unreinforced presentations of the CS in both contexts. An alcohol-primed reinstatement test was then conducted, in which 0.2 ml of ethanol was presented at the start of the session and during the first CS trial, after which no ethanol was delivered for the remainder of the session. At both test and reinstatement, male rats made significantly more CS port-entries in the context associated with alcohol delivery than in the context in which alcohol was never experienced. Unlike males, female rats made a similar number of CS port-entries at test in both the alcohol context and the neutral context. The reinstatement observed in female rats was also not affected by context. These findings suggest that the capacity of an alcohol-associated context to modulate responding to a discrete, alcohol-predictive cue is less pronounced in female than male rats.





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