Authors
Lucia F Jacobs, SJ Gaulin, David F Sherry, Gloria E Hoffman
Publication date
1990/8
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
87
Issue
16
Pages
6349-6352
Description
In a study of two congeneric rodent species, sex differences in hippocampal size were predicted by sex-specific patterns of spatial cognition. Hippocampal size is known to correlate positively with maze performance in laboratory mouse strains and with selective pressure for spatial memory among passerine bird species. In polygamous vole species (Rodentia: Microtus), males range more widely than females in the field and perform better on laboratory measures of spatial ability; both of these differences are absent in monogamous vole species. Ten females and males were taken from natural populations of two vole species, the polygamous meadow vole, M. pennsylvanicus, and the monogamous pine vole, M. pinetorum. Only in the polygamous species do males have larger hippocampi relative to the entire brain than do females. Two-way analysis of variance shows that the ratio of hippocampal volume to brain …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
LF Jacobs, SJ Gaulin, DF Sherry, GE Hoffman - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990