Behavioral Neuroscience Program, Department of Psychology, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA.
Aggress Behav. 2013 Jul-Aug;39(4):290-300. doi: 10.1002/ab.21476. Epub 2013 Mar 20.
Winning an aggressive encounter enhances the probability of winning future contests. This phenomenon, known as the winner effect, has been well studied across vertebrate species. While numerous animal models have been developed to study the winner effect in the laboratory setting, large variation in experimental design, choice of species, and housing conditions have resulted in conflicting reports on the behavioral outcomes. The Syrian hamster (Mesocricetus auratus) presents as a novel species with face validity to study the effects of repeated fighting on subsequent agonistic encounters. After a 14-day training period, "trained fighter" hamsters displayed elevated fighting behaviors characterized by more intense and severe displays of aggression along with increased displays of dominant postures compared to naïve residents with no prior social experience. To determine whether these phenotypic changes in fighting behavior reflect alterations in neurochemistry, brains of aggressive and naïve hamsters were examined for changes in dopaminergic innervation in key regions known to control social and motivational behavior. Interestingly, changes in tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate limiting enzyme for dopamine production, were observed in brain regions within the social decision-making network. These increases in aggression observed after repeated winning may reflect a learned behavior resulting from increases in neurotransmitter activity which serve to reinforce the behavior. The data implicate the presence of a winner effect in hamsters and provide evidence for a neural mechanism underlying the changes in aggressive behavior after repeated agonistic encounters.
在竞争中获胜会提高未来获胜的概率。这种现象被称为胜利者效应,在脊椎动物物种中已有广泛研究。虽然已经开发了许多动物模型来在实验室环境中研究胜利者效应,但由于实验设计、物种选择和饲养条件的巨大差异,导致关于行为结果的报告相互矛盾。叙利亚仓鼠(Mesocricetus auratus)作为一种具有研究重复战斗对随后攻击性行为影响的新颖物种出现。经过 14 天的训练期,“训练有素的斗士”仓鼠表现出更高的战斗行为,其特点是攻击性更强、更严重,并且与没有社交经验的“新手”仓鼠相比,表现出更多的支配性姿势。为了确定这些战斗行为的表型变化是否反映了神经化学的改变,对攻击性和新手仓鼠的大脑进行了检查,以观察控制社交和动机行为的关键区域中的多巴胺能神经支配的变化。有趣的是,在社会决策网络中的大脑区域中观察到酪氨酸羟化酶(多巴胺产生的限速酶)的变化。在反复获胜后观察到的攻击性增加可能反映了一种习得行为,这种行为是由于神经递质活性的增加,从而加强了这种行为。这些数据表明,仓鼠中存在胜利者效应,并为反复攻击性行为后攻击性行为变化的神经机制提供了证据。