Sex differences in white matter tracts of capuchin monkey brains

Author:

Reilly Olivia T.123ORCID,Brosnan Sarah F.1245,Benítez Marcela E.26,Phillips Kimberley A.78,Hecht Erin E.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology Georgia State University Atlanta Georgia

2. Language Research Center Georgia State University Atlanta Georgia

3. Department of Human Evolutionary Biology Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts

4. Center for Behavioral Neuroscience Georgia State University Atlanta Georgia

5. Neuroscience Institute Georgia State University Atlanta Georgia

6. Department of Anthropology Emory University Atlanta Georgia

7. Department of Psychology Trinity University San Antonio Texas

8. Southwest National Primate Research Center Texas Biomedical Research Institute San Antonio Texas

Abstract

AbstractNonhuman primates exhibit sexual dimorphism in behavior, suggesting that there could be underlying differences in brain organization and function. Understanding this neuroanatomical variation is critical for enhancing our understanding of the evolution of sex differences in the human brain. Tufted capuchin monkeys (Sapajus [Cebus] apella) represent a phylogenetically diverse taxa of neotropical primates that converge on several behavioral characteristics with humans relevant to social organization, making them an important point of comparison for studying the evolution of sex differences in primates. While anatomical sex differences in gray matter have previously been found in capuchin monkeys, the current study investigates sex differences in white matter tracts. We carried out tract‐based spatial statistical analysis on fractional anisotropy images of tufted capuchin monkeys (15 female, 5 male). We found that females showed significantly higher fractional anisotropy than males in regions of frontal‐parietal white matter in the right cerebral hemisphere. Paralleling earlier findings in gray matter, male and female fractional anisotropy values in these regions were nonoverlapping. This complements prior work pointing toward capuchin sex differences in limbic circuitry and higher‐order visual regions. We propose that these sex differences are related to the distinct socioecological niches occupied by male and female capuchins. Capuchin neuroanatomical sex differences appear to be more pronounced than in humans, which we suggest may relate to human adaptations for prolonged neurodevelopmental trajectories and increased plasticity.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Georgia State University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Neuroscience

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