نتایج جستجو برای: maternal behaviour

تعداد نتایج: 281330  

Journal: :Journal of neuroendocrinology 2008
N M Cameron D Shahrokh A Del Corpo S K Dhir M Szyf F A Champagne M J Meaney

Studies across multiple organisms reveal considerable phenotypic variation in reproductive tactics. In some species, this variation is associated with maternal effects in which variation in maternal investment results in stable individual differences in reproductive function. Recent studies with the rat suggest that maternal effects can alter the function of neuroendocrine systems associated wi...

Journal: :PloS one 2015
Kelly J Robinson Sean D Twiss Neil Hazon Patrick P Pomeroy

Maternal behaviour is a crucial component of reproduction in all mammals; however the quality of care that mothers give to infants can vary greatly. It is vital to document variation in maternal behaviour caused by the physiological processes controlling its expression. This underlying physiology should be conserved throughout reproductive events and should be replicated across all individuals ...

Journal: :Behavioural brain research 2008
Joanna L Workman Zachary M Weil Christiana R Tuthill Randy J Nelson

This study investigated the effect of maternal pinealectomy and postnatal pinealectomy on affective responses. Siberian hamsters were born to either pinealectomized or sham-operated dams and then underwent pinealectomy or a sham operation. Maternal pinealectomy increased depressive-like responses of offspring in the forced swim test. Maternal pinealectomy increased rearing behaviour and postnat...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2003
Kerri Smith Susan C Alberts Jeanne Altmann

Adult female cercopithecines have long been known to bias their social behaviour towards close maternal kin. However, much less is understood about the behaviour of paternal kin, especially in wild populations. Here, we show that wild adult female baboons bias their affiliative behaviour towards their adult paternal half-sisters in the same manner and to the same extent that they bias their beh...

Journal: :Journal of neuroendocrinology 2009
Frances A Champagne

Summary How does 'nurture' change the brain? Recent evidence suggests that maternal care may shape the infant brain by turning genes 'on' or 'off' during development. Some of the genes affected are important for maternal and social behaviour leading to long-term changes in the nurturing behaviour of offspring. These studies provide new insights into the inheritance of behaviour and the interact...

Journal: :Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie 1972
M Daly

Maternal behaviour in golden hamsters has been the subject of several studies (ROWELL 1960, 1961 a, 1961 b; LOTT 1962; NOIROT & RICHARDS 1966; RICHARDS 1966 a, 1966 b). Most of these have investigated the response to the presentation of pups placed outside the nest by the experimenter, analysing the functional relations between test behaviour and such variables as reproductive stage, hormonal s...

2001
Sandra J. Weiss Peggy Wilson Steven M. Paul

The purpose of this study was twofold: to determine (1) the degree to which specific qualities of maternal touch may contribute to the low birth weight infant’s emotional and behavioural problems as well as social adaptation, and (2) the relationship between maternal touch and a mother’s other caregiving behaviour. The sample included 114 socioculturally diverse infants and their mothers who we...

Journal: :Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews 2008
Marta Weinstock

UNLABELLED Maternal distress during pregnancy increases plasma levels of cortisol and corticotrophin releasing hormone in the mother and foetus. These may contribute to insulin resistance and behaviour disorders in their offspring that include attention and learning deficits, generalized anxiety and depression. The changes in behaviour, with or independent of alterations in the function of the ...

2016
SHANNON K. HOSS DOUGLAS H. DEUTSCHMAN WARREN BOOTH RULON W. CLARK

The relatedness of individuals can have pronounced effects on behavioural interactions, as engaging in mutually beneficial behaviours with kin can increase inclusive fitness. Parental care can be particularly important for kin discrimination in birds and mammals, but similar studies have not been conducted on species exhibiting more rudimentary forms of care. Maternal attendance of young is ubi...

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