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Corticolimbic catecholamines in stress: a computational model of the appraisal of controllability
- Source :
- Brain Structure & Function
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Appraisal of a stressful situation and the possibility to control or avoid it is thought to involve frontal-cortical mechanisms. The precise mechanism underlying this appraisal and its translation into effective stress coping (the regulation of physiological and behavioural responses) are poorly understood. Here, we propose a computational model which involves tuning motivational arousal to the appraised stressing condition. The model provides a causal explanation of the shift from active to passive coping strategies, i.e. from a condition characterised by high motivational arousal, required to deal with a situation appraised as stressful, to a condition characterised by emotional and motivational withdrawal, required when the stressful situation is appraised as uncontrollable/unavoidable. The model is motivated by results acquired via microdialysis recordings in rats and highlights the presence of two competing circuits dominated by different areas of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex: these are shown having opposite effects on several subcortical areas, affecting dopamine outflow in the striatum, and therefore controlling motivation. We start by reviewing published data supporting structure and functioning of the neural model and present the computational model itself with its essential neural mechanisms. Finally, we show the results of a new experiment, involving the condition of repeated inescapable stress, which validate most of the model’s predictions.
- Subjects :
- chronic stress
dopamine
cortical control
noradrenaline
animal model
appraisal
Motivation
Behavior, Animal
Dopamine
Microdialysis
Models, Neurological
Prefrontal Cortex
Corpus Striatum
Nucleus Accumbens
Rats
Catecholamines
Adaptation, Psychological
Noradrenaline
Animals
Computer Simulation
Original Article
Chronic stress
Animal model
Neural Networks, Computer
Algorithms
Stress, Psychological
Appraisal
Cortical control
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18632661
- Volume :
- 220
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Brain structurefunction
- Accession number :
- edsair.pmid.dedup....a152580a509b7aff4e7008af68965a11