
Jesus Evaristo MadridCornell University | CU · Department of Psychology
Jesus Evaristo Madrid
Doctor of Philosophy
About
11
Publications
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Introduction
Additional affiliations
June 2012 - September 2013
August 2009 - June 2012
Publications
Publications (11)
The ability to recognize individuals is a critical skill acquired early in life for group living species. In primates, individual recognition occurs predominantly through face discrimination. Despite the essential adaptive value of this ability, robust individual differences in conspecific face recognition exist, yet its associated biology remains...
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by social cognition impairments but its basic disease mechanisms remain poorly understood. Progress has been impeded by the absence of animal models that manifest behavioral phenotypes relevant to ASD. Rhesus monkeys are an ideal model organism to address this barrier to progress. Like humans, rhesus...
Bisphenol A (BPA) is an estrogenic endocrine disruptor widely used in the production of plastics. Increasing evidence indicates that in utero BPA exposure affects sexual differentiation and behavior; however, the mechanisms underlying these effects are unknown. We hypothesized that BPA may disrupt epigenetic programming of gene expression in the br...
Monogamous pair bonding has evolved to enhance reproductive success and ensure offspring survival. Although the behavioral and neural mechanisms regulating the formation of pair bonds have been relatively well outlined, how these relationships are regulated and maintained across the lifetime of an individual remains relatively unexplored. One way t...
Rhesus monkeys and humans are highly social primates, yet both species exhibit pronounced variation in social functioning, spanning a spectrum of sociality. Naturally occurring low sociality in rhesus monkeys may be a promising construct by which to model social impairments relevant to human autism spectrum disorder (ASD), particularly if low socia...
Comparative research on arvicoline rodents has provided important insights into the neurobiological basis of social bonds. Within the last two decades, the prairie vole (Microtus ochrogaster) has emerged as a model organism for studying monogamy and has become a cornerstone in the study of mechanisms underlying pair bonds, parental care, and aggres...
Research has increasingly highlighted the role that developmental plasticity-the ability of a particular genotype to produce variable phenotypes in response to different early environments-plays as an adaptive mechanism. One of the most widely studied genetic contributors to developmental plasticity in humans and rhesus macaques is a serotonin tran...
Face Recognition Memory Test and Response to Conspecific Social Signals Test raw data and analyses.
(DOCX)
Face Recognition Memory Test Stimuli.
(PDF)