Relationships between ovarian hormone concentrations and mental rotations performance in naturally-cycling women
Circulating gonadal hormones have been linked to variation in the structure and function of the adult human brain, raising the question of how cognition is affected by sex hormones in adulthood. The impacts of progestogens and estrogens are of special interest due to the widespread use of hormone su...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Hormones and behavior 2021-01, Vol.127, p.104886-104886, Article 104886 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Circulating gonadal hormones have been linked to variation in the structure and function of the adult human brain, raising the question of how cognition is affected by sex hormones in adulthood. The impacts of progestogens and estrogens are of special interest due to the widespread use of hormone supplementation. Multiple studies have analyzed relationships between ovarian hormones and mental rotation performance, one of the largest known cognitive sex differences; however, results are conflicting. These discrepancies are likely due in part to modest sample sizes and reliance on self-report measures to assess menstrual cycle phase. The present study aimed to clarify the impact of progestogens and estrogens on visuospatial cognition by relating mental rotation task performance to salivary hormone concentrations. Across two studies totaling 528 naturally-cycling premenopausal women, an internal meta-analysis suggested a small, positive effect of within-subjects changes in progesterone on MRT performance (estimate = 0.44, p = 0.014), though this result should be interpreted with caution given multiple statistical analyses. Between-subjects differences and within-subject changes in estradiol did not significantly predict MRT. These results shed light on the potential cognitive effects of endogenous and exogenous hormone action, and the proximate mechanisms modulating spatial cognition.
•Tested associations between ovarian hormones and mental rotations performance•528 naturally-cycling premenopausal women participated.•Progesterone positively predicted mental rotations performance within subjects.•No other relationships between estradiol or progesterone and MRT were found.•Results should be interpreted cautiously due to risk of Type I error. |
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ISSN: | 0018-506X 1095-6867 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2020.104886 |