Hormones and aggression

M. A. Martí-Carbonell, S. Darbra, A. Garau, F. Balada

    Producció científica: Contribució a revistaArticle de revisióRecercaAvaluat per experts

    Resum

    This work is a review about psychoendocrinologic aspects of aggressive behavior. We have considered two approaches, the classical view focused on hormonal influences in the regulation of aggression and the most recent view which accounts for the influences of aggressive behavior and social status on hormonal secretion. In this review we differentiate the organizational from the activational effects. The main conclusions are referred to the gonadal steroids effects both organization and activation of the neural subtract of aggression. Among them it seems that aromatizable androgens have the most important effects. On the other hand, the testosterone would be predictive for dominant social status, the corticosterone would be for submission and finally, the ACTH would be predictive for the aggressive behavior but not for submission. In addition to that the literature point that the defeat experience is the main factor in submission. Referred to the effects of behavior on hormonal secretions, all the studies point out that social interaction elicits sympathetic-medullar and gonadal activation in the dominant animals and cortico-adrenal activation in the submissive ones.
    Idioma originalAnglès
    Pàgines (de-a)162-174
    RevistaArchivos de neurobiologiá
    Volum55
    Número4
    Estat de la publicacióPublicada - 1 de gen. 1992

    Fingerprint

    Navegar pels temes de recerca de 'Hormones and aggression'. Junts formen un fingerprint únic.

    Com citar-ho