Title of article :
Learning during middle age: A resistance to stress?
Author/Authors :
Georgia E. Hodes، نويسنده , , Tracey J. Shors، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
6
From page :
1783
To page :
1788
Abstract :
Acute stressful experience enhances subsequent learning in males and impairs learning in females. These sex differences emerge soon after puberty in adulthood. Whether these opposite effects of stress on learning extend into older age is unknown. To examine this, young adult (2–3 months) and middle aged (17–18 months) Fischer 344 rats of both sexes were exposed to an acute stressor of brief tailshocks and trained 24 h later with classical eyeblink conditioning using a trace paradigm. Whereas stressful experience enhanced conditioning in adult males and impaired conditioning in adult females, it had no effect whatsoever on conditioning in the aging animals of either sex. There was no effect of aging itself on acquisition of the conditioned response, suggesting that trace conditioning is not necessarily compromised during this period of life. Together, these data indicate that associative learning in the aging animal is resistant to both the negative and positive consequences of stressful experience.
Keywords :
Trace conditioning , estrogen , glucocorticoids , learning , aging , Sex differences
Journal title :
Neurobiology of Aging
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Neurobiology of Aging
Record number :
821092
Link To Document :
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