BEHAVIORAL STRATEGIES OF AGGRESSIVE AND NONAGGRESSIVE MALE-MICE IN RESPONSE TO INESCAPABLE SHOCK

被引:31
作者
BENUS, RF
BOHUS, B
KOOLHAAS, JM
VANOORTMERSSEN, GA
机构
[1] Dept. of Animal Physiology, University of Groningen, 9750 AA Haren
关键词
individual differences aggression response to inescapable shock behavioural strategies wild house mice;
D O I
10.1016/0376-6357(90)90020-G
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The effect of exposure to inescapable long-duration shocks of moderate intensity on intershock activity and on subsequent escape or avoidance performance was studied in aggressive and non-aggressive male mice. The activity of the non-aggressive mice was severely suppressed during the inescapable shock session, while that of the aggressive males was hardly influenced. The decremental effect of prior shock exposure on subsequent response latency and activity in an active two-way escape or avoidance task was greater in the non-aggressive than in the aggressive mice. There was no evidence that learned inactivity or learned helplessness (an associative deficit) could explain the results. Instead, individual differences in behavioural strategy in response to threatening situations appeared to account for the effects of inescapable shock. Aggressive male mice predominantly adopted an active behavioural strategy in challenging situations, which resulted in persistent attempts to exercise control over the external situation and hence in a sustained tendency to initiate responses. Non-aggressive mice primarily assumed a passive strategy; their tendency to exercise control was low, which readily resulted in a reduced tendency to initiate responses. © 1990.
引用
收藏
页码:127 / 141
页数:15
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]   ESCAPE PERFORMANCE FOLLOWING EXPOSURE TO INESCAPABLE SHOCK - DEFICITS IN MOTOR RESPONSE MAINTENANCE [J].
ANISMAN, H ;
DECATANZARO, D ;
REMINGTON, G .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-ANIMAL BEHAVIOR PROCESSES, 1978, 4 (03) :197-218
[2]   FACILITATIVE AND DISRUPTIVE EFFECTS OF PRIOR EXPOSURE TO SHOCK ON SUBSEQUENT AVOIDANCE PERFORMANCE [J].
ANISMAN, H ;
WALLER, TG .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE AND PHYSIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1972, 78 (01) :113-&
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1956, NONPARAMETRIC STAT B
[4]   BEHAVIORAL STRATEGIES OF AGGRESSIVE AND NONAGGRESSIVE MALE-MICE IN ACTIVE SHOCK AVOIDANCE [J].
BENUS, RF ;
BOHUS, B ;
KOOLHAAS, JM ;
VANOORTMERSSEN, GA .
BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES, 1989, 20 (1-3) :1-12
[5]   EFFECTS OF RESTRAINT AND NONCONTINGENT PRESHOCK ON SUBSEQUENT ESCAPE LEARNING IN RAT [J].
BRACEWELL, RJ ;
BLACK, AH .
LEARNING AND MOTIVATION, 1974, 5 (01) :53-69
[6]  
Camm AJ, 1996, CIRCULATION, V93, P1043
[7]   DEFENSIVE RESPONDING AND LEVERPRESS TOPOGRAPHY COMPATIBILITY - EFFECTS OF SHOCK-INTENSITY, S-S INTERVAL, AND LEVER POSITION [J].
FELDT, RC ;
MCCANN, LI .
ANIMAL LEARNING & BEHAVIOR, 1977, 5 (01) :78-82
[8]   LONG-TERM INTERFERENCE EFFECT - ALTERNATIVE TO LEARNED HELPLESSNESS [J].
GLAZER, HI ;
WEISS, JM .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-ANIMAL BEHAVIOR PROCESSES, 1976, 2 (03) :202-213
[9]   LONG-TERM AND TRANSITORY INTERFERENCE EFFECTS [J].
GLAZER, HI ;
WEISS, JM .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-ANIMAL BEHAVIOR PROCESSES, 1976, 2 (03) :191-201
[10]   EXPOSURE TO INESCAPABLE SHOCK PRODUCES BOTH ACTIVITY AND ASSOCIATIVE DEFICITS IN RAT [J].
JACKSON, RL ;
MAIER, SF ;
RAPAPORT, PM .
LEARNING AND MOTIVATION, 1978, 9 (01) :69-98