Department of Psychology, Social Sciences Center, and Department of Psychiatry, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, N6A 5C2, Canada.
Curr Psychiatry Rep. 2018 Oct 11;20(12):109. doi: 10.1007/s11920-018-0972-1.
Working memory (WM) is a key process that is integral to many complex cognitive tasks, and it declines significantly with advancing age. This review will survey recent evidence supporting the idea that the functioning of the WM system in women is modulated by circulating estrogens.
In postmenopausal women, increased estrogen concentrations may be associated with improved WM function, which is evident on WM tasks that have a high cognitive load or significant manipulation demands. Experimental studies in rhesus monkeys and human neuroimaging studies support a prefrontal locus for these effects. Defining the basic neurochemical or cellular mechanisms that underlie the ability of estrogens to regulate WM is a topic of current research in both human and animal investigations. An emerging body of work suggests that frontal executive elements of the WM system are influenced by the circulating estrogen concentrations currently available to the CNS and that the effects are region-specific within the frontal cortex. These findings have implications for women's brain health and cognitive aging.
工作记忆(WM)是许多复杂认知任务不可或缺的关键过程,并且随着年龄的增长而显著下降。本综述将调查最近的证据,这些证据支持这样一种观点,即女性 WM 系统的功能受到循环雌激素的调节。
在绝经后妇女中,较高的雌激素浓度可能与 WM 功能的改善有关,这在 WM 任务中表现明显,这些任务具有较高的认知负荷或显著的操作要求。恒河猴的实验研究和人类神经影像学研究支持这些影响的前额叶定位。定义雌激素调节 WM 的基本神经化学或细胞机制是当前人类和动物研究的一个主题。越来越多的研究表明,WM 系统的前额执行要素受中枢神经系统当前可用的循环雌激素浓度的影响,并且在额叶皮层内具有区域特异性。这些发现对女性的大脑健康和认知衰老具有重要意义。