Are reactions to frustrative nonreward in other animals a model for human anger? Neurobehavioral implications and therapeutic applications.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Behavioral neuroscience Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-30 DOI:10.1037/bne0000574
M Potegal
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Anger is a powerful and mostly deleterious emotion that can impair an individual's health and social relationships and that imposes considerable costs on society at large. It is a constituent of multiple psychopathologies, most notably intermittent explosive disorder. Excessive anger can drive injurious and even lethal reactive aggression. To understand its biobehavioral origins and develop appropriate therapeutic interventions, an animal model of human anger would be quite useful. The phenomena of aggression provoked by frustrative nonreward (FNR) in other animals, including species of fish, birds, and mammals, resemble those in people in whom it elicits subjectively experienced anger. The brief history presented here traces the original, overgeneralized frustration-aggression hypothesis for humans through to the discovery of operant schedule-induced attack in birds, rodents, and ourselves to the current status of FNR as a cross-species, transdiagnostic construct within the National Institute of Health Research Domain Criteria. Brain circuitry that is activated by frustration, generates felt anger and motivates reactive aggression includes discomfort reactions likely instantiated in the insula and cingulate gyrus of the salience network and reward expectancy/prediction error mediated by the ventral striatum and other structures. Caveats in establishing a paradigm for other animals that most closely matches FNR-induced anger in people include avoiding confounds with other aggression-provoking stimuli and situations, providing evidence for aggressive motivation, as well as behavior, and demonstrating activation of homologous brain structures. With appropriate regard for these caveats, developing such paradigms appears to be the best route to advancing psychopharmacological and deep brain stimulation treatments for excessive anger. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

其他动物对沮丧的不回应的反应是人类愤怒的模型吗?神经行为学意义和治疗应用。
愤怒是一种强大且大多有害的情绪,它会损害个人的健康和社会关系,并给整个社会带来相当大的代价。它是多种精神病理学的组成部分,最显著的是间歇性爆炸性疾病。过度的愤怒会导致伤害性甚至致命的反应性攻击。为了了解其生物行为起源并制定适当的治疗干预措施,人类愤怒的动物模型将非常有用。在包括鱼类、鸟类和哺乳动物在内的其他动物身上,沮丧不回应(FNR)引发的攻击现象与人们主观感受到的愤怒相似。这里介绍的简史可以追溯到人类最初的、过度概括的挫折-攻击假说,直到在鸟类、啮齿动物和我们自己身上发现操作性时间表诱导的攻击,再到FNR作为国家卫生研究所领域标准中的跨物种、跨诊断结构的现状。被挫败感激活、产生感觉到的愤怒并激发反应性攻击的大脑回路包括可能在显著性网络的脑岛和扣带回实例化的不适反应,以及由腹侧纹状体和其他结构介导的奖励预期/预测错误。在为其他动物建立最符合FNR诱导的人类愤怒的范式时,需要注意的事项包括避免与其他激发攻击性的刺激和情况混淆,为攻击性动机和行为提供证据,以及证明同源大脑结构的激活。考虑到这些注意事项,开发这样的范式似乎是推进心理药理学和脑深部刺激治疗过度愤怒的最佳途径。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。
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
Behavioral neuroscience
Behavioral neuroscience 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
51
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Behavioral Neuroscience publishes original research articles as well as reviews in the broad field of the neural bases of behavior.
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