Sex, age, and training modulate spatial memory in the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta).

A Lacreuse, CB Kim, DL Rosene, RJ Killiany… - Behavioral …, 2005 - psycnet.apa.org
A Lacreuse, CB Kim, DL Rosene, RJ Killiany, MB Moss, TL Moore, L Chennareddi…
Behavioral neuroscience, 2005psycnet.apa.org
The authors tested 90 rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) on a task of spatial memory, the
spatial Delayed Recognition Span Test. The results showed that performance declined
significantly with age, males had greater scores than females, and the rate of apparent
decline with age was greater in males than in females. Both working and reference memory
declined with age, but only working memory showed sex differences. The authors compared
these data with that of 22 monkeys who were trained on a simpler version of the task before …
Abstract
The authors tested 90 rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) on a task of spatial memory, the spatial Delayed Recognition Span Test. The results showed that performance declined significantly with age, males had greater scores than females, and the rate of apparent decline with age was greater in males than in females. Both working and reference memory declined with age, but only working memory showed sex differences. The authors compared these data with that of 22 monkeys who were trained on a simpler version of the task before formal testing. Training had no effect on males but dramatically improved working memory in young females. The results confirm a male advantage in spatial working memory at a young age and confirm a greater decline with age in males than in females. It is important to note that prior training completely reverses the deficits of young females.
American Psychological Association
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