# Menstrual Cycle Modulation of Verbal Performance and Hemispheric Asymmetry

**Authors:** Ivana Hromatko, Meri Tadinac

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/brainsci15111141 · 2025-10-24

## TL;DR

This study shows that sex hormones during the menstrual cycle affect verbal performance and brain hemisphere activity in women.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates a link between sex hormone levels and hemispheric asymmetry in verbal tasks, which varies across the menstrual cycle.

## Key findings

- Sex hormones modulate verbal performance and hemispheric asymmetry during the menstrual cycle.
- Functional asymmetry was higher in the luteal phase compared to the menstrual phase.
- Performance and laterality shifts occurred only in sex-differentiated tasks, not in sex-neutral tasks.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: It has been postulated that sex differences in certain types of verbal abilities arise from sex-dimorphic patterns of hemispheric activation, and that these patterns might be modulated by circulating levels of sex hormones. The aim of this study was to explore the activational effects of sex hormones (throughout the menstrual cycle) on both verbal performance and functional hemispheric asymmetries (qEEG laterality) in three types of verbal tasks: sex-differentiated (verbal fluency and semantic decision) vs. sex-neutral (verbal reasoning) tasks. Methods: A group (n = 32) of healthy young women was tested twice, once during the mid-luteal (high levels of circulating sex hormones) and once during the early follicular (low levels of sex hormones) phases of the menstrual cycle. A comparable group of healthy young men (n = 32) was tested once. EEG was continuously recorded. The differences in alpha power on homologous sites of the left and right hemispheres were then calculated. Results: We found a clear congruence between performance on a task and laterality score: for sex-differentiated tasks, the activational effects of sex hormones were observed in both performance and laterality scores, while there were neither performance nor laterality scores shifts throughout the menstrual cycle for the sex-neutral task. Interestingly, measures of functional asymmetry were higher in the luteal compared to the menstrual phase. Conclusions: These findings suggest that sex hormones modulate verbal performance through their influence on hemispheric asymmetry.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12650095/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12650095