Trait sensitivity to stress and cognitive bias processes in fish: A brief overview.

Q3 Medicine
Personality Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-01-31 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1017/pen.2023.14
Jhon Buenhombre, Erika Alexandra Daza-Cardona, Daniel Mota-Rojas, Adriana Domínguez-Oliva, Astrid Rivera, Catalina Medrano-Galarza, Paulo de Tarso, María Nelly Cajiao-Pachón, Francisco Vargas, Adriana Pedraza-Toscano, Pêssi Sousa
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Abstract

Like other animals, fish have unique personalities that can affect their cognition and responses to environmental stressors. These individual personality differences are often referred to as "behavioural syndromes" or "stress coping styles" and can include personality traits such as boldness, shyness, aggression, exploration, locomotor activity, and sociability. For example, bolder or proactive fish may be more likely to take risks and present lower hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal/interrenal axis reactivity as compared to shy or reactive individuals. Likewise, learning and memory differ between fish personalities. Reactive or shy individuals tend to have faster learning and better association recall with aversive stimuli, while proactive or bold individuals tend to learn more quickly when presented with appetitive incentives. However, the influence of personality on cognitive processes other than cognitive achievement in fish has been scarcely explored. Cognitive bias tests have been employed to investigate the interplay between emotion and cognition in both humans and animals. Fish present cognitive bias processes (CBP) in which fish's interpretation of stimuli could be influenced by its current emotional state and open to environmental modulation. However, no study in fish has explored whether CBP, like in other species, can be interpreted as long-lasting traits and whether other individual characteristics may explain its variation. We hold the perspective that CBP could serve as a vulnerability factor for the onset, persistence, and recurrence of stress-related disorders. Therefore, studying fish's CBP as a state or trait and its interactions with individual variations may be valuable in future efforts to enhance our understanding of anxiety and stress neurobiology in animal models and humans.

鱼类对压力和认知偏差过程的特质敏感性:简要概述。
与其它动物一样,鱼类也有独特的个性,这会影响它们的认知和对环境压力的反应。这些个体性格差异通常被称为 "行为综合征 "或 "压力应对方式",可包括大胆、害羞、攻击性、探索、运动活动和交际能力等性格特征。例如,与害羞或反应迟钝的个体相比,大胆或积极主动的鱼可能更喜欢冒险,下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺/肾上腺轴的反应性也较低。同样,不同性格的鱼在学习和记忆方面也有所不同。反应性或害羞的个体往往学习速度更快,对厌恶刺激的联想记忆能力更强,而积极主动或大胆的个体在遇到开胃刺激时往往学习速度更快。然而,除了认知成就之外,性格对鱼类认知过程的影响还很少被研究。认知偏差测试被用来研究人类和动物的情绪与认知之间的相互作用。鱼类存在认知偏差过程(CBP),鱼类对刺激的解释可能受其当前情绪状态的影响,并可受环境调节。然而,目前还没有研究鱼类的认知偏差过程是否能像其他物种一样被解释为持久的特征,以及其他个体特征是否能解释其变化。我们认为,CBP 可能是导致压力相关疾病发生、持续和复发的一个易感因素。因此,将鱼类的CBP作为一种状态或性状及其与个体差异之间的相互作用进行研究,对于我们今后加深对动物模型和人类的焦虑和压力神经生物学的理解可能很有价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Personality Neuroscience
Personality Neuroscience Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
审稿时长
6 weeks
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