Kennedy Ann, Asahina Kenta, Hoopfer Eric, Inagaki Hidehiko, Jung Yonil, Lee Hyosang, Remedios Ryan, Anderson David J
Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125.
Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Pasadena, California 91125.
Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol. 2014;79:199-210. doi: 10.1101/sqb.2014.79.024984. Epub 2015 May 6.
Social interactions, such as an aggressive encounter between two conspecific males or a mating encounter between a male and a female, typically progress from an initial appetitive or motivational phase, to a final consummatory phase. This progression involves both changes in the intensity of the animals' internal state of arousal or motivation and sequential changes in their behavior. How are these internal states, and their escalating intensity, encoded in the brain? Does this escalation drive the progression from the appetitive/motivational to the consummatory phase of a social interaction and, if so, how are appropriate behaviors chosen during this progression? Recent work on social behaviors in flies and mice suggests possible ways in which changes in internal state intensity during a social encounter may be encoded and coupled to appropriate behavioral decisions at appropriate phases of the interaction. These studies may have relevance to understanding how emotion states influence cognitive behavioral decisions at higher levels of brain function.
社会互动,例如两个同种雄性之间的攻击性遭遇或雄性与雌性之间的交配遭遇,通常从最初的欲求或动机阶段发展到最后的 consummatory 阶段。这种进展既涉及动物内部唤醒或动机状态强度的变化,也涉及它们行为的顺序变化。这些内部状态及其不断升级的强度是如何在大脑中编码的?这种升级是否驱动了社会互动从欲求/动机阶段到 consummatory 阶段的进展,如果是这样,在这个进展过程中如何选择适当的行为?最近关于果蝇和小鼠社会行为的研究表明了一些可能的方式,在社会遭遇期间内部状态强度的变化可能被编码,并在互动的适当阶段与适当的行为决策相耦合。这些研究可能与理解情绪状态如何在更高层次的大脑功能中影响认知行为决策有关。