Sex differences in a human analogue of the Radial Arm Maze: the "17-Box Maze Test" |
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Authors: | Rahman Qazi Abrahams Sharon Jussab Fardin |
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Affiliation: | School of Psychology, University of East London, The Green, London E15 4LZ, UK. q.rahman@uel.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | This study investigated sex differences in spatial memory using a human analogue of the Radial Arm Maze: a revision on the Nine Box Maze originally developed by called the 17-Box Maze Test herein. The task encourages allocentric spatial processing, dissociates object from spatial memory, and incorporates a within-participants design to provide measures of location and object, working and reference memory. Healthy adult males and females (26 per group) were administered the 17-Box Maze Test, as well as mental rotation and a verbal IQ test. Females made significantly fewer errors on this task than males. However, post hoc analysis revealed that the significant sex difference was specific to object, rather than location, memory measures. These were medium to large effect sizes. The findings raise the issue of task- and component-specific sexual dimorphism in cognitive mapping. |
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Keywords: | Sex differences Allocentric Spatial memory Mental rotation Radial arm maze Hippocampus |
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