Abstract
ANIMALS that have been exposed to environmental stimulation develop marked differences in brain structure and biochemistry when compared with animals that have not been exposed in this way1–4. Factors influencing the magnitude of these changes are the duration of rearing and the age of the animals when the environmental separation takes place. Most studies have focused on young animals because the brain is thought to be more plastic at this stage. As a result, temporal analyses of the induced changes have usually been limited to fairly short periods of environmental exposure early in the animal's life. Rosenzweig et al.3 have suggested that, in rats differentially reared from weaning, the induced differences in brain weight reach a maximum during the first 30 d of separation, after which they decrease. But the evidence for this biphasic response has been based on relatively short periods of differential rearing (15–160 d).
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References
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Walsh, R. N., Cummins, R. A., and Budtz-Olsen, O. E., Develop. Psychobiol. (in the press).
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CUMMINS, R., WALSH, R., BUDTZ-OLSEN, O. et al. Environmentally-induced Changes in the Brains of Elderly Rats. Nature 243, 516–518 (1973). https://doi.org/10.1038/243516a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/243516a0
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