Newman S W
Department of Psychology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1999 Jun 29;877:242-57. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1999.tb09271.x.
Hormonal and chemosensory signals regulate social behaviors in a wide variety of mammals. In the male Syrian hamster, these signals are integrated in nuclei of the medial extended amygdala, where olfactory and vomeronasal system transmission is modulated by populations of androgen- and estrogen-sensitive neurons. Evidence from behavioral changes following lesions and from immediate early gene expression supports the hypothesis that the medial extended amygdala and medial preoptic area belong to a circuit that functions selectively in male sexual behavior. However, accumulated behavioral, neuroanatomical, and neuroendocrine data in hamsters, other rodents, and other mammals indicate that this circuit is embedded in a larger integrated network that controls not only male mating behavior, but female sexual behavior, parental behavior, and various forms of aggression. In this context, perhaps an individual animal's social responses can be more easily understood as a repertoire of closely interrelated, hormone-regulated behaviors, shaped by development and experience and modulated acutely by the environmental signals and the hormonal milieu of the brain.
激素和化学感觉信号调节着多种哺乳动物的社会行为。在雄性叙利亚仓鼠中,这些信号在内侧延伸杏仁核的核团中整合,嗅觉和犁鼻系统的传递在那里受到雄激素和雌激素敏感神经元群体的调节。损伤后行为变化以及即时早期基因表达的证据支持了这样的假说,即内侧延伸杏仁核和内侧视前区属于一个在雄性性行为中选择性发挥作用的回路。然而,仓鼠、其他啮齿动物和其他哺乳动物积累的行为、神经解剖学和神经内分泌数据表明,这个回路嵌入在一个更大的整合网络中,该网络不仅控制雄性交配行为,还控制雌性性行为、亲代行为和各种形式的攻击行为。在这种情况下,或许个体动物的社会反应更容易被理解为一系列紧密相关、受激素调节的行为,这些行为由发育和经验塑造,并受到环境信号和大脑激素环境的急性调节。