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The most robust sex differences in cognition across polygynous mammalian species are the sex-specific patterns of the use of spatial cues during encoding and orientation. In laboratory rats, wild rodents, and humans, females orient preferentially to the features and arrangement of local landmarks, while males preferentially attend to distant landmarks. Yet this sex-specific pattern is often absent...
Sex differences in spatial learning are found in many species of mammals and even in invertebrates. Results from laboratory mouse studies, however, have been inconsistent in comparison to studies of humans, laboratory rats and wild rodent species. Here we re-examined this question in C57BL/6J mice that were exposed to enriched environments using two tasks, an object recognition task and a place learning...
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