Elsevier

Hormones and Behavior

Volume 19, Issue 4, December 1985, Pages 469-498
Hormones and Behavior

Organizational and activational effects of sex steroids on brain and behavior: A reanalysis

https://doi.org/10.1016/0018-506X(85)90042-XGet rights and content

Abstract

The actions of sex steroids on brain and behavior traditionally have been divided into organizational and activational effects. Organizational effects are permanent and occur early in development; activational effects are transient and occur throughout life. Over the past decade, experimental results have accumulated which do not fit such a simple two-process theory. Specifically, the characteristics said to distinguish organizational and activational effects on behavior are sometimes mixed, as when permanent effects occur in adulthood. Attempts to determine whether specific cellular processes are uniquely associated with either organizational or activational effects are unsuccessful. These considerations blur the organizational-activational distinction sufficiently to suggest that a rigid dichotomy is no longer tenable.

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