Halperin J R, Dunham D W
Department of Zoology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Behav Processes. 1993 Feb;28(3):123-44. doi: 10.1016/0376-6357(93)90087-8.
We examine the literature on fishes' aggressive behaviour after social isolation, in the light of a connectionist adaptive control system model for robot motivation and learning. If animals used the model's motivation modules, then social isolation would cause two simultaneous processes to occur-one progressively increasing motivation, the other decreasing display readiness. The readiness decrement would have the temporal flexibility typical of motivation changes, and would disappear soon after social stimuli reappeared. The incremental effect would be synaptic, and would be temporally more stable. Due to this stability difference, brief post-isolation aggression tests would tend to show that social isolates have depressed attack readiness, but longer tests would uncover the underlying increase in aggressiveness. In reviewing the literature, we find that this has been overwhelmingly the case. A new hypothesis about the adaptive value of the increase of aggression during isolation is outlined, which may help make the phenomenon more understandable.
我们根据一种用于机器人动机和学习的联结主义自适应控制系统模型,审视了关于鱼类在社会隔离后的攻击行为的文献。如果动物使用该模型的动机模块,那么社会隔离会导致两个同时发生的过程——一个是动机逐渐增加,另一个是表现准备度降低。准备度的降低会具有动机变化典型的时间灵活性,并且在社会刺激再次出现后很快就会消失。增量效应将是突触性的,并且在时间上会更稳定。由于这种稳定性差异,短暂的隔离后攻击测试往往会表明社会隔离个体的攻击准备度降低,但更长时间的测试会揭示潜在的攻击性增加。在回顾文献时,我们发现情况绝大多数都是如此。我们概述了一个关于隔离期间攻击性增加的适应性价值的新假设,这可能有助于使该现象更易于理解。