Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Horm Behav. 2020 Jul;123:104645. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2019.104645. Epub 2019 Dec 16.
Our review focuses on findings from mammals as part of a Special Issue "30th Anniversary of the Challenge Hypothesis". Here we put forth an integration of the mechanisms through which testosterone controls territorial behavior and consider how reproductive experience may alter these mechanisms. The emphasis is placed on the function of socially induced increases in testosterone (T) pulses, which occur in response to social interactions, as elegantly developed by Wingfield and colleagues. We focus on findings from the monogamous California mouse, as data from this species shows that reproductive status is a key factor influencing social interactions, site fidelity, and vigilance for offspring defense. Specifically, we examine differences in T pulses in sexually naïve versus sexually experienced pair bonded males. Testosterone pulses influence processes such as social decision making, the winner-challenge effect, and location preferences through rewarding effects of T. We also consider how social and predatory vigilance contribute to T pulses and how these interactions contribute to a territory centered around maximizing reproduction. Possible underlying mechanisms for these effects include the nucleus accumbens (rewarding effects of testosterone), hippocampus (spatial memories for territories), and the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (social vigilance). The development of the challenge effect has provided an ideal framework for understanding the complex network of behavioral, environmental, physiological and neural mechanisms that ultimately relates to competition and territoriality across taxa. The opportunity to merge research on the challenge effect using both laboratory and field research to understand social behavior is unparalleled.
我们的综述重点关注哺乳动物的研究结果,这是“挑战假说 30 周年特刊”的一部分。在这里,我们提出了一个整合睾酮控制领地行为的机制的观点,并考虑了生殖经验如何改变这些机制。我们强调的是社会互动引起的睾酮(T)脉冲的功能,正如 Wingfield 及其同事所阐述的那样。我们专注于单配制的加利福尼亚鼠的研究结果,因为该物种的数据表明,生殖状态是影响社会互动、栖息地忠诚度和对后代防御警惕性的关键因素。具体来说,我们检查了性未成熟与性经验丰富的配对绑定雄性之间 T 脉冲的差异。T 脉冲通过 T 的奖赏作用影响社交决策、胜者挑战效应和位置偏好等过程。我们还考虑了社会和捕食警惕性如何促成 T 脉冲,以及这些相互作用如何有助于以最大限度繁殖为中心的领地。这些影响的可能潜在机制包括伏隔核(睾酮的奖赏作用)、海马体(领地的空间记忆)和终纹床核(社交警惕性)。挑战效应的发展为理解行为、环境、生理和神经机制之间复杂的网络提供了一个理想的框架,这些机制最终与不同分类群的竞争和领地性有关。利用实验室和野外研究来理解社会行为的机会是无与伦比的。