Results 221 to 230 of about 5,952 (255)
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Paternal deprivation alters play-fighting, serum corticosterone and the expression of hypothalamic vasopressin and oxytocin in juvenile male mandarin voles

Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology, 2012
Although early paternal deprivation significantly affects offspring behavioral and neuroendocrine development, the link between paternal deprivation and social play behavior remains unclear. Mandarin voles (Microtus mandarinus) are socially monogamous and display bi-paternal care.
Jianli Wang, Fadao Tai, Tai Fadao
exaly   +3 more sources

Early bi-parental separation or neonatal paternal deprivation in mandarin voles reduces adult offspring paternal behavior and alters serum corticosterone levels and neurochemistry

Hormones and Behavior, 2015
Although the effect of early social environments on maternal care in adulthood has been examined in detail, few studies have addressed the long-term effect on paternal care and its underlying neuroendocrine mechanisms. Here, using monogamous mandarin voles (Microtus mandarinus) that show high levels of paternal care, the effects of early bi-parental ...
Xibo Li, Fengqin He, Fadao Tai
exaly   +3 more sources

Effects of paternal deprivation on empathetic behavior and the involvement of oxytocin receptors in the anterior cingulate cortex

Hormones and Behavior
Paternal deprivation (PD) impairs social cognition and sociality and increases levels of anxiety-like behavior. However, whether PD affects the levels of empathy in offspring and its underlying mechanisms remain unknown. The present study found that PD increased anxiety-like behavior in mandarin voles (Microtus mandarinus), impaired sociality, reduced ...
Wenjuan Hou   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

Pre-weaning paternal deprivation impairs social recognition and alters hippocampal neurogenesis and spine density in adult mandarin voles

Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, 2018
Disruption of the early social environment, such as maternal separation or early deprivation, can impair cognitive function, alter offspring neurogenesis and restrict dendritic architecture in the hippocampus. However, whether paternal deprivation during the pre-weaning period affects adult neurogenesis, synaptogenesis and social recognition remains ...
Zhixiong He, Laifu Li, Wenjuan Hou
exaly   +3 more sources

Felony and Paternal Deprivation: a Socio-Psychiatric View

open access: yesInternational Journal of Social Psychiatry, 1971
Gustave Newman, Sidney B. Denman
openaire   +2 more sources

Visual spatial perception and paternal deprivation

Personality and Individual Differences, 1983
Abstract College men and women who were father deprived for at least 1 year from birth to 18 years of age or non-deprived were compared on the Spatial Relations Test of the Differential Aptitude Tests (DAT), the Identical Blocks Test (IBT) and the Water Level Test (WLT).
Alan G. Krasnoff, James T. Walker
openaire   +1 more source

OCCUPATIONAL COMMITMENTS AND PATERNAL DEPRIVATION

Child: Care, Health and Development, 1978
Summary In the post‐war era the husband‐father role has been enlarged to encompass active participation in family life. However, occupational commitments may inhibit active involvement in family life, particularly in the middle classes where work has traditionally been defined as salient.
openaire   +2 more sources

Paternal sleep deprivation induces metabolic perturbations in male offspring via altered LRP5 DNA methylation of pancreatic islets

Journal of Pineal Research, 2023
AbstractDiabetes and metabolic perturbation are global health challenges. Sleep insufficiency may trigger metabolic dysregulation leading to diabetes. However, the intergenerational transmission of this environmental information is not clearly understood.
Yi, Zeng   +6 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The Effect of Paternal Deprivation on the Capacity to Modulate Aggression

New Literary History, 1995
loss presumes that the mourner has had meaningful physical and psychological contact with the person who has been lost. But there are many situations where the absence or loss of an individual in the family with whom a child may have had only minimal contact or has never even seen is acknowledged and referred to by the adults.
openaire   +1 more source

Paternal deprivation alters the development of catecholaminergic innervation in the prefrontal cortex and related limbic brain regions

Brain Structure and Function, 2012
The impact of paternal care on the development of catecholaminergic fiber innervations in the prefrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens, hippocampus and the amygdala was quantitatively investigated in the biparental Octodon degus. Two age (juvenile, adult) and rearing groups: (1) degus reared without father and (2) degus raised by both parents were compared.
Katharina, Braun   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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