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Prestimulus top-down reflection of obsessive-compulsive disorder in EEG frontal theta and occipital alpha oscillations
Authors:Min Byoung-Kyong  Kim Se Joo  Park Jin Young  Park Hae-Jeong
Affiliation:a Dipartimento di Scienze della Salute, Università degli Studi dell’Aquila, Via Vetoio, Coppito 2, 67010 Coppito (AQ), Italy
b Sezione di Neuropsicologia, I.R.C.C.S. Fondazione Santa Lucia, Via Ardeatina 306, 00179 Rome, Italy
c Dipartimento di Psicologia 39, Università Sapienza degli Studi di Roma, Italy
d Presidio Ospedaliero San Paolo ASL NA1, Laboratorio di Neuropsicologia, Via Terracina, Naples, Italy
Abstract:Sex differences are consistently reported in human navigation. Indeed, to orient themselves during navigation women are more likely to use landmark-based strategies and men Euclidean-based strategies. The difference could be due to selective social pressure, which fosters greater spatial ability in men, or biological factors. And the great variability of the results reported in the literature could be due to the experimental setting more than real differences in ability. In this study, navigational behaviour was assessed by means of a place-learning task in which a modified version of the Morris water maze for humans was used to evaluate sex differences. In using landmarks, sex differences emerged only during the learning phase. Although the men were faster than the women in locating the target position, the differences between the sexes disappeared in delayed recall.
Keywords:Gender differences   Spatial abilities   Orientation   Human navigation   Morris water maze   Place learning   Wayfinding
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