Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
International

Does Sexual Aggression Change Female Brain?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Feb, 2016 12:54 PM
    Exposure to sexual violence may alter the female brain and reduce maternal behaviour needed to care for offspring, a new study suggests.
     
    The researchers discovered that pre-pubescent female rodents paired with sexually experienced males elevated the levels of stress hormones -- could not learn as well and expressed reduced maternal behaviours that needed to care for offspring.
     
    "This study is important because we need to understand how sexual aggression affects all species," said lead author Tracey Shors from Rutgers University's school of arts and sciences. 
     
    "We also need to know the consequences of this behaviour in order for us to determine what we can do to help women learn to recover from sexual aggression and violence," Shors added in the paper published in the journal Scientific Reports.
     
    Women who experience sexual violence are more likely to suffer from depression, PTSD and other mood disorders.
     
    Thirty percent of women worldwide have experienced some kind of physical or sexual assault in their lifetime and adolescent girls are much more likely to be victims of rape, attempted rape or assault, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).
     
    Researchers wanted to determine how stress associated with sexual aggression affected female rodents.
     
    According to the findings, females in this study that were exposed to the adult male throughout puberty did not exhibit as much maternal behaviour as females that did not have the social interactions. 
     
    Fewer newly generated brain cells were present in the females that had minimal maternal behaviour when compared to females that did learn to care for offspring.
     
    "Laboratory models used to measure stress in animals have traditionally looked at how stress affects males and have not reflected the kind of stress that young women experience," she said.
     
    Sexual aggression and violence is one of the most likely causes of PTSD in women, which is associated with decreased brain functions related to learning and memory, the study found

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Princeton Professor Angus Deaton Wins Nobel Prize For Measuring Poverty In India

    Princeton Professor Angus Deaton Wins Nobel Prize For Measuring Poverty In India
    Nobel Prize winner Angus Deaton's current research focuses on the determinants of health in rich and poor countries as well as on the measurement of poverty in India and around the world.

    Princeton Professor Angus Deaton Wins Nobel Prize For Measuring Poverty In India

    Top Pakistani Leaders Knew About Osama's Presence: Ex-Minister Chaudhry Ahmad Mukhtar

    Top Pakistani Leaders Knew About Osama's Presence: Ex-Minister Chaudhry Ahmad Mukhtar
    This is the first time a senior Pakistani leader has publicly admitted what was always suspected -- that the Pakistani establishment was aware that Bin Laden was living in Abbottabad

    Top Pakistani Leaders Knew About Osama's Presence: Ex-Minister Chaudhry Ahmad Mukhtar

    Amanda Lang Leaving CBC For Another TV Opportunity

    Amanda Lang Leaving CBC For Another TV Opportunity
    Lang joined the CBC in 2009 as one half of "The Lang & O'Leary Exchange," which was renamed "The Exchange with Amanda Lang" after Kevin O'Leary left the show.

    Amanda Lang Leaving CBC For Another TV Opportunity

    From Dubai To Mumbai, Migrants Flock To Bihar To Vote

    From Dubai To Mumbai, Migrants Flock To Bihar To Vote
    Thousands of migrants are flocking to Bihar from far and wide to vote in the assembly elections, an enthusiasm not seen earlier.

    From Dubai To Mumbai, Migrants Flock To Bihar To Vote

    Indian-American Judge Amul Thapar To Be Felicitated

    Indian-American Judge Amul Thapar To Be Felicitated
    Amul Thapar will be honoured at a NAPABA convention in New Orleans on November 6, India-West on Monday quoted a NAPABA statement as saying.

    Indian-American Judge Amul Thapar To Be Felicitated

    20-Year-Old Indian Student Mandeep Singh Missing In New Zealand

    20-Year-Old Indian Student Mandeep Singh Missing In New Zealand
    Auckland police are searching for an Indian student who went missing after a night out, a media report said on Monday.

    20-Year-Old Indian Student Mandeep Singh Missing In New Zealand