Internal States and Behavioral Decision-Making: Toward an Integration of Emotion and Cognition

Social interactions, such as an aggressive encounter between two conspecific males or a mating encounter between a male and a female, typically progress from an initial appetitive or motivational phase, to a final consummatory phase. This progression involves both changes in the intensity of the ani...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology 2014, Vol.79, p.199-210
Hauptverfasser: Kennedy, Ann, Asahina, Kenta, Hoopfer, Eric, Inagaki, Hidehiko, Jung, Yonil, Lee, Hyosang, Remedios, Ryan, Anderson, David J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Social interactions, such as an aggressive encounter between two conspecific males or a mating encounter between a male and a female, typically progress from an initial appetitive or motivational phase, to a final consummatory phase. This progression involves both changes in the intensity of the animals' internal state of arousal or motivation and sequential changes in their behavior. How are these internal states, and their escalating intensity, encoded in the brain? Does this escalation drive the progression from the appetitive/motivational to the consummatory phase of a social interaction and, if so, how are appropriate behaviors chosen during this progression? Recent work on social behaviors in flies and mice suggests possible ways in which changes in internal state intensity during a social encounter may be encoded and coupled to appropriate behavioral decisions at appropriate phases of the interaction. These studies may have relevance to understanding how emotion states influence cognitive behavioral decisions at higher levels of brain function.
ISSN:0091-7451
1943-4456
DOI:10.1101/sqb.2014.79.024984