Riters Lauren V, Kelm-Nelson Cynthia A, Spool Jeremy A
Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Division of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Front Physiol. 2019 Apr 12;10:421. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2019.00421. eCollection 2019.
The formation of social groups provides safety and opportunities for individuals to develop and practice important social skills. However, joining a social group does not result in any form of obvious, immediate reinforcement (e.g., it does not result in immediate copulation or a food reward), and individuals often remain in social groups despite agonistic responses from conspecifics. Much is known about neural and endocrine mechanisms underlying the motivation to perform mate- or offspring-directed behaviors. In contrast, relatively little is known about mechanisms underlying affiliative behaviors outside of these primary reproductive contexts. Studies on flocking behavior in songbirds are beginning to fill this knowledge gap. Here we review behavioral evidence that supports the hypothesis that non-sexual affiliative, flocking behaviors are both (1) rewarded by positive social interactions with conspecifics, and (2) reinforced because affiliative contact reduces a negative affective state caused by social isolation. We provide evidence from studies in European starlings, , that mu opioid receptors in the medial preoptic nucleus (mPOA) play a central role in both reward and the reduction of a negative affective state induced by social interactions in flocks, and discuss potential roles for nonapeptide/opioid interactions and steroid hormones. Finally, we develop the case that non-sexual affiliative social behaviors may be modified by two complementary output pathways from mPOA, with a projection from mPOA to the periaqueductal gray integrating information during social interactions that reduces negative affect and a projection from mPOA to the ventral tegmental area integrating information leading to social approach and reward.
社会群体的形成给个体提供了安全保障以及发展和实践重要社交技能的机会。然而,加入一个社会群体并不会带来任何形式的明显、即时强化(例如,不会带来即时交配或食物奖励),而且尽管会受到同种个体的攻击反应,个体通常仍会留在社会群体中。关于执行针对配偶或后代行为的动机背后的神经和内分泌机制,我们已经了解很多。相比之下,对于这些主要生殖背景之外的亲和行为背后的机制,我们了解得相对较少。对鸣禽群居行为的研究开始填补这一知识空白。在这里,我们回顾行为证据,这些证据支持以下假设:非性亲和的群居行为既是(1)通过与同种个体的积极社会互动得到奖励,也是(2)因为亲和接触减少了由社会隔离引起的负面情绪状态而得到强化。我们提供了来自欧洲椋鸟研究的证据,即内侧视前核(mPOA)中的μ阿片受体在奖励以及减少群居时社会互动引起的负面情绪状态方面都发挥着核心作用,并讨论了九肽/阿片相互作用和类固醇激素的潜在作用。最后,我们提出这样一种观点:非性亲和的社会行为可能由mPOA的两条互补输出通路进行调节,其中一条从mPOA投射到导水管周围灰质,在社会互动过程中整合信息以减少负面影响,另一条从mPOA投射到腹侧被盖区,整合信息以引导社会接近和奖励。