Physiology & behavior
-
Physiology & behavior · Jun 2002
Comparative Study Clinical TrialOdors modulate pain perception: a gender-specific effect.
Odors naturally provoke emotions that are pleasant or unpleasant. Prior studies have demonstrated the effects of pleasing odors on cognition and mood perception, but no studies have reported if they influence pain perception. In the present study, we measured the effect of, and relationship between, different odors on mood and experimental pain perception. ⋯ However, the effect of odor on pain was gender specific, as only women experienced the effects of odor on pain perception. Because no relationship was found between mood and pain perception, it could suggest that different mechanisms are involved in the emotional aspects of mood and pain perception. These results and their potential clinical implications are discussed.
-
Physiology & behavior · Jun 2002
Comparative StudySex differences in the acquisition of a radial maze task in the CD-1 mouse.
The purpose of the present study was to investigate spatial processing performance in male and female CD-1 mice. A substantial literature supports the existence of significant sex differences in both human and rodent models of learning and memory. The nature of these differences is dependent upon the parameters of the task, species and strain of animal. ⋯ In addition, female mice obtained significantly fewer rewards during the final two testing sessions. The present data provide the first evidence for sex differences in radial maze learning in the CD-1 mouse, a strain known for its estrogen insensitivity. Consistent with the majority of literature that supports sex differences in spatial processing in rodents, female CD-1 mice acquired significantly fewer rewards than male CD-1 mice during an eight-arm radial maze task.