Author:
Bliss-Moreau Eliza,Baxter Mark G.
Abstract
AbstractAs humans age, their affective lives tend to become more positive and less negative. This phenomenon, known as the positivity effect (or positivity bias), occurs even as aging leads to declines in health and cognitive outcomes. Despite these well documented effects in humans, extent to which affective processes change in nonhuman animals, and in particular nonhuman primates – is unclear. As a first step towards developing a model for human affective aging in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta), we tested aged, surgically menopausal aged and middle-aged gonadally intact female rhesus monkeys on a classic index of affective reactivity in monkeys, the Human Intruder task. The Human Intruder task evaluates behavioral responses to varying levels of threat. Aged, surgically menopausal monkeys received hormone replacement therapy consisting of a cyclic estradiol regimen, or vehicle injections as a control. Average responsivity to threat did not vary by condition, but middle aged monkeys and aged monkeys on estradiol were more reactive to the most potent level of threat than to a moderate level of threat, replicating previously published results in other age groups and male monkeys. In contrast, aged monkeys not on estradiol did not show such calibration to threat level. These findings suggest that estrogen may be important for maintaining more youthful affective responding. They also illustrate the utility of behavioral assays of affective reactivity in nonhuman primate models of cognitive and reproductive aging in humans.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory