Summary: | Thesis advisor: Michael Numan === Postpartum female rats immediately respond to biological or foster offspring with the display of maternal behavior. In contrast, females that are hysterectomized and ovariectomized on day 15 of pregnancy (15HO) and presented with pups 48 hours later show maternal behavior after 2-3 days of pup exposure. The natural onset of maternal behavior in postpartum females is mediated, in part, by the rise in estradiol just prior to birth. When 15HO rats are administered estradiol benzoate (EB) at the time of HO surgery, 48 hours prior to pup presentation, they show an almost immediate onset of maternal behavior. Presumably, EB administration functions to prime neural circuits which regulate maternal behavior such that these circuits respond to pup presentation with increased maternal responsiveness. Two important neural regions which have been shown to interact in order to promote responsiveness toward infant stimuli are the medial preoptic area (MPOA) and the nucleus accumbens (NA). The following series of studies were undertaken to examine how dopamine (DA) activity within these two important neural sites substitutes for the facilitatory effects of chronic (48 hours) EB stimulation of maternal behavior in 15HO rats. Study 1 investigates whether, in the absence of EB treatment, microinjection of dopamine receptor agonists into either NA or MPOA at the time of pup presentation stimulate maternal behavior in 15HO rats. Study 2 examines the underlying mechanism by which DA receptor stimulation of NA promotes the onset of maternal behavior in 15HO rats. Finally, Study 3 examines the relationship between DA receptor stimulation and estradiol stimulation in the facilitation of maternal responsiveness in 15HO rats. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2009. === Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. === Discipline: Psychology.
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