Alcohol, aggression and the stress of subordination.

R J Blanchard, E B Yudko, D C Blanchard
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引用次数: 32

Abstract

In individual resident-intruder or novel arena confrontations alcohol enhancement of aggression appears less robust than when groups of animals receive the drug. Patterns of effects in the latter situations, such as enhanced attack on familiar animals, particularly familiar females, suggest that group living engenders attack inhibitions, perhaps based on enhanced anxiety/defensiveness, that may be overcome by alcohol. Male rats living in natural, mixed-sex groups in seminatural situations develop strong dominance-subordination relationships that appear to strongly stress subordinates. Subordinate males show strongly and chronically increased defensive behaviors, increased corticosterone and reduced testosterone levels and, often, early mortality. When allowed access to both alcohol and water, they increase voluntary alcohol consumption, in comparison to dominants. Analyses of relationships between voluntary consumption and defensive behaviors support a view that the voluntary consumption increases of subordinate rats are mediated by the anxiolytic effect of alcohol in highly stressed animals.

酒精,侵略性和从属压力。
在个体的居民-入侵者或新的竞技场对抗中,酒精对攻击性的增强似乎不如一群动物服用该药时那么强烈。后一种情况下的影响模式,例如对熟悉的动物,特别是熟悉的雌性动物的攻击增强,表明群体生活产生了攻击抑制,可能是基于增强的焦虑/防御,这可能会被酒精克服。在半自然的情况下,生活在自然、混合性别群体中的雄性大鼠发展出强烈的支配-从属关系,这似乎给下属带来了强烈的压力。从属雄性表现出强烈而长期的防御行为增加,皮质酮增加,睾酮水平降低,并且经常出现早期死亡。当允许她们同时获得酒精和水时,她们比占主导地位的人更愿意自愿饮酒。自愿消费与防御行为之间的关系分析支持了一种观点,即在高度应激动物中,酒精的焦虑作用介导了服从大鼠自愿消费的增加。
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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