Sexual Brain Flashcards

1
Q

Sexual Response Cycle

A
  1. Excitement ^
  2. Plateau
  3. Orgasm ^^
  4. Resolution v
  • blood pressure decreases and muscles in the body relax
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2
Q

Comparing Men and Women During Sexual Response Cycle

A
  • men acted somewhat differently during arousal and in the plateau phases
  • female and men acted more similar during orgasm
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3
Q

Testosterone

A
  • fluctuating levels are associated with sexual desire and arousal
  • higher levels are linked with vaginal blood flow during copulation
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4
Q

Sexual Dimorphism of the Brain

A
  • male brains are larger and have slightly higher proportion of white matter
  • females have slightly larger proportion of grey matter

-adolescence and childhood brain growth peaks with girl earlier and then boys possibly connected to pubertal growth

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5
Q

Object Location Memory Task

A
  • object is moved to a new location
  • male rats perform well
  • females only perform well at a 1 hour interval
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6
Q

Object Recognition

A
  • novel (new) object task
  • rat explore copies of an object then replaced with copy and novel item
  • female rats perform better when assessing novel object recognition, exploring novel objects
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7
Q

Object Location in Humans

A
  • females typically outperform males in tasks of memory for object location
  • better at novel condition
  • females use more strategies of naming objects, when this ability was restricted the sex differences lessened
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8
Q

Brain Scans of People in Love

A

fMRI determined what parts of brain were active when viewing photos of people they were in love with

  • some overlap with emotion-related regions
  • some overlap with positive emotion regions relating reward (dopamine)
  • love connected with reward
  • activation of positive emotion regions positively correlates to how passionate love was
  • activation of emotion related regions were positively correlated with length of time in love
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9
Q

Misconceptions of Jealousy as a sign of Love

A

measured in socially monogamous Titi Monkeys as it is shown in mate-guarding practices

  • higher uptake of glucose in brain regions associated with emotion, including social bonding and memory
  • higher circulating levels of testosterone and cortisol
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10
Q

Physiological Changes during Sexual Activity

A
  • sympathetic nervous system activated
  • gives tunnel vision
  • pumps more blood to muscles
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11
Q

Pheromones

A

chemical substances with communicative functions
- external discharge
- affects behaviour and physiology of other members of species

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12
Q

Oxytocin

A
  • circulating levels increase during sex and after orgasm
  • uterine contraction during peaks
  • bonding/attachment and calming effect
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13
Q

Pharmacological Effects of Testosterone

A
  • men with low T experience increased sexual arousal
  • men with normal levels don’t experience an effect
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14
Q

Reduction of Anxiety from Mating

A

Mated rats were more likely to go into the open arms (indicating less anxiety)
- effects lasted for 2 hours

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15
Q

Neural Regions Engaged during Copulation

A
  • reward
  • emotion and memory
  • hormone control
  • attention
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16
Q

White Matter

A

coating around nerve cells that make neural transmission faster

17
Q

Grey Matter

A

main parts of cell bodies

18
Q

Spatial Navigation Memory

A

Rats find a platform using visual cues so they can stop swimming

  • men use spatial strategies e.g. locations relative to landmarks
  • women use egocentric strategies e.g. at a landmark I go left
  • sex differences not present when more salient info is provided
  • estradiol contribute to this difference