Adaptations or pathologies? Long-term changes in brain and behavior after a single exposure to severe threat
The experience of a single threatening situation may alter the behavior of an animal in a long-lasting way. Long-lasting changes in behavior have been induced in laboratory animals to model and investigate the development and neural substrate of human psychopathologies. Under natural conditions, how...
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description | The experience of a single threatening situation may alter the behavior of an animal in a long-lasting way. Long-lasting changes in behavior have been induced in laboratory animals to model and investigate the development and neural substrate of human psychopathologies. Under natural conditions, however, changes in behavior after an aversive experience may be adaptive because behavioral modifications allow animals to adjust to a threat for extended periods of time. In the laboratory setting, properties of the aversive situation and the potential of the animal to respond to the threat may be altered and lead to extensive, prolonged changes, indicating a failure in behavioral regulation. Such long-term changes seem to be mediated by neuronal alterations in components of the fear pathway. To understand psychopathologies, determinants of exaggerated responsivity and the underlying molecular and neural processes have to be analyzed in a comparative way under conditions that produce normal and abnormal fear and anxiety. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2003.09.005 |
format | Article |
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Long-term changes in brain and behavior after a single exposure to severe threat</title><title>Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews</title><addtitle>Neurosci Biobehav Rev</addtitle><description>The experience of a single threatening situation may alter the behavior of an animal in a long-lasting way. Long-lasting changes in behavior have been induced in laboratory animals to model and investigate the development and neural substrate of human psychopathologies. Under natural conditions, however, changes in behavior after an aversive experience may be adaptive because behavioral modifications allow animals to adjust to a threat for extended periods of time. In the laboratory setting, properties of the aversive situation and the potential of the animal to respond to the threat may be altered and lead to extensive, prolonged changes, indicating a failure in behavioral regulation. Such long-term changes seem to be mediated by neuronal alterations in components of the fear pathway. To understand psychopathologies, determinants of exaggerated responsivity and the underlying molecular and neural processes have to be analyzed in a comparative way under conditions that produce normal and abnormal fear and anxiety.</description><subject>Adaptation</subject><subject>Adaptation, Psychological - physiology</subject><subject>Animal ethology</subject><subject>Animals</subject><subject>Anxiety</subject><subject>Association Learning - physiology</subject><subject>Avoidance Learning - physiology</subject><subject>Behavior, Animal - physiology</subject><subject>Biological and medical sciences</subject><subject>Brain - physiology</subject><subject>Escape Reaction - physiology</subject><subject>Fear</subject><subject>Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology</subject><subject>General aspects</subject><subject>Long-term changes</subject><subject>Neuronal Plasticity</subject><subject>Neuropsychology</subject><subject>One-trial-learning</subject><subject>Predation</subject><subject>Psychology. Psychoanalysis. 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subjects | Adaptation Adaptation, Psychological - physiology Animal ethology Animals Anxiety Association Learning - physiology Avoidance Learning - physiology Behavior, Animal - physiology Biological and medical sciences Brain - physiology Escape Reaction - physiology Fear Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology General aspects Long-term changes Neuronal Plasticity Neuropsychology One-trial-learning Predation Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry Psychopathology Time |
title | Adaptations or pathologies? Long-term changes in brain and behavior after a single exposure to severe threat |
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