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Evidence of MAOA genotype involvement in spatial ability in males

Authors :
Monique Ernst
Jessica MacIntyre
Brian R. Cornwell
Elena Gorodetsky
Sven C. Mueller
Daniel S. Pine
David Goldman
Christian Grillon
Source :
BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Although the monoamine oxidase-A (MAOA) gene has been linked to spatial learning and memory in animal models, convincing evidence in humans is lacking. Performance on an ecologically-valid, virtual computer-based equivalent of the Morris Water Maze task was compared between 28 healthy males with the low MAOA transcriptional activity and 41 healthy age- and IQ-matched males with the high MAOA transcriptional activity. The results revealed consistently better performance (reduced heading error, shorter path length, and reduced failed trials) for the high MAOA activity individuals relative to the low activity individuals. By comparison, groups did not differ on pre-task variables or strategic measures such as first-move latency. The results provide novel evidence of MAOA gene involvement in human spatial navigation using a virtual analogue of the Morris Water Maze task.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01664328
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e6611cc7660977971c6048e411cd2bf3