review article | Q7318358 |
scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1016/S0018-506X(03)00127-2 |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 14609538 |
P2093 | author name string | D Caroline Blanchard | |
Robert J Blanchard | |||
Philip M Wall | |||
P2860 | cites work | An evolutionary approach to behavioral pharmacology: using drugs to understand proximate and ultimate mechanisms of different forms of aggression in mice | Q77780612 |
Brain structures and neurotransmitters regulating aggression in cats: implications for human aggression | Q34192427 | ||
Aggressive behavior in the rat | Q34236490 | ||
Mouse defensive behaviors: pharmacological and behavioral assays for anxiety and panic. | Q34264829 | ||
Interaction between reflexive fighting and cooperative escape | Q34280462 | ||
Aggressive behavioral phenotypes in mice | Q34420653 | ||
Ethology and pharmacology of hypothalamic aggression in the rat. | Q36962732 | ||
Agonistic behavior of mice and rats: a review | Q39963695 | ||
Subordination stress: behavioral, brain, and neuroendocrine correlates | Q40729179 | ||
Attack and defensive behaviour in the albino rat | Q43687505 | ||
Defensive burying and stress gastric erosions in alcohol-preferring AA and alcohol-avoiding ANA rats | Q48706904 | ||
Attenuation of defensive threat and attack in wild rats (Rattus rattus) by benzodiazepines | Q48933150 | ||
Different test situations for measuring offensive aggression in male rats do not result in the same wound pattern | Q49022119 | ||
Attack and defense in laboratory and wild Norway and black rats | Q49092432 | ||
Fischer 344 and wistar rats differ in anxiety and habituation but not in water maze performance. | Q51044998 | ||
Differences in anxiety-related behaviours and in sensitivity to diazepam in inbred and outbred strains of mice. | Q51082988 | ||
Play-fighting in the Syrian golden hamster Mesocricetus auratus Waterhouse, and its relationship to serious fighting during postweaning development. | Q52251769 | ||
Effects of lithium chloride injections on rank-related fighting, maternal aggression and locust-killing responses in naive and experienced ‘TO’ strain mice | Q52428669 | ||
Sexual and aggressive interactions in a visible burrow system with provisioned burrows. | Q53896098 | ||
Antipredator defensive behaviors in a visible burrow system. | Q54112413 | ||
Behavior, adrenocortical activity, and brain monoamines in Norway rats selected for reduced aggressiveness towards man | Q69101502 | ||
The inhibitory effects of fluprazine on parental aggression in female mice are dependent upon intruder sex | Q69444556 | ||
Comparative analyses of the role of postnatal development on the expression of play fighting | Q73480564 | ||
Defensive behaviors in wild and laboratory (Swiss) mice: the mouse defense test battery | Q77690486 | ||
Play fighting of rats in comparative perspective: a schema for neurobehavioral analyses | Q77712462 | ||
P433 | issue | 3 | |
P304 | page(s) | 161-170 | |
P577 | publication date | 2003-09-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Hormones and Behaviour | Q15760887 |
P1476 | title | Problems in the study of rodent aggression | |
P478 | volume | 44 |
Q30469846 | A comparison of scent marking between a monogamous and promiscuous species of peromyscus: pair bonded males do not advertise to novel females |
Q30420515 | Acute stress in adulthood impoverishes social choices and triggers aggressiveness in preclinical models. |
Q40445112 | Adaptation in the corticosterone and hyperthermic responses to stress following repeated stressor exposure |
Q30481903 | Aggression and anxiety: social context and neurobiological links |
Q34117021 | Anatomical connections between the anterior and posterodorsal sub-regions of the medial amygdala: integration of odor and hormone signals |
Q92127559 | Animal Models of (or for) Aggression Reward, Addiction, and Relapse: Behavior and Circuits |
Q24645693 | Animal models of suicide-trait-related behaviors |
Q30587175 | Antagonistic control of social versus repetitive self-grooming behaviors by separable amygdala neuronal subsets. |
Q30445754 | Behavioral and pharmacogenetics of aggressive behavior. |
Q30453470 | Brain serotonin receptors and transporters: initiation vs. termination of escalated aggression |
Q47722104 | Central V1b receptor antagonism in lactating rats: impairment of maternal care but not of maternal aggression |
Q51801163 | Characterization of offensive responses during the maturation of play-fighting into aggression in male golden hamsters. |
Q34021848 | Chronic social stress in puberty alters appetitive male sexual behavior and neural metabolic activity |
Q58296081 | Comparative analysis of the responses to intruders with anxiety‐related behaviors of mouse |
Q30458768 | Comprehensive neurocognitive endophenotyping strategies for mouse models of genetic disorders |
Q38649656 | Considerations on nonclinical approaches to modeling risk factors of suicidal ideation and behavior |
Q35215385 | Contrasting hippocampal and amygdalar expression of genes related to neural plasticity during escape from social aggression |
Q37042392 | Differences in aggressive behavior and DNA copy number variants between BALB/cJ and BALB/cByJ substrains |
Q48196191 | Differential effects of site-specific knockdown of estrogen receptor α in the medial amygdala, medial pre-optic area, and ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus on sexual and aggressive behavior of male mice |
Q24654065 | Disruption of the vasopressin 1b receptor gene impairs the attack component of aggressive behavior in mice |
Q37430544 | Early life stress, the development of aggression and neuroendocrine and neurobiological correlates: what can we learn from animal models? |
Q33699072 | Effects of photoperiod and experience on aggressive behavior in female California mice |
Q42172415 | Endogenous Oxytocin, Vasopressin, and Aggression in Domestic Dogs |
Q38039966 | Endophenotypes as a measure of suicidality |
Q35329746 | Ephrin-A5 regulates inter-male aggression in mice. |
Q30499528 | Functional identification of an aggression locus in the mouse hypothalamus |
Q50680674 | Genotype on the pigmentation regulating PMEL17 gene affects behavior in chickens raised without physical contact with conspecifics. |
Q100697669 | Glutamate transporter-1 link astrocytes with heightened aggressive behavior induced by steroid abuse in male CF1 mice |
Q35067144 | High aggression in rats is associated with elevated stress, anxiety-like behavior, and altered catecholamine content in the brain |
Q47668888 | History of winning remodels thalamo-PFC circuit to reinforce social dominance |
Q64019868 | Identification of Cholecystokinin by Genome-Wide Profiling as Potential Mediator of Serotonin-Dependent Behavioral Effects of Maternal Separation in the Amygdala |
Q51814234 | Lead exposure alters the development of agonistic behavior in golden hamsters. |
Q48436231 | Low inborn anxiety correlates with high intermale aggression: link to ACTH response and neuronal activation of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus |
Q36364240 | Modelling facets of mania--new directions related to the notion of endophenotypes. |
Q33732450 | Murine pheromone proteins constitute a context-dependent combinatorial code governing multiple social behaviors |
Q24632939 | Mutant mouse models: genotype-phenotype relationships to negative symptoms in schizophrenia |
Q34028484 | Neonatal exposure of rats to antidepressants affects behavioral reactions to novelty and social interactions in a manner analogous to autistic spectrum disorders |
Q52663003 | Neurocircuitry of aggression and aggression seeking behavior: nose poking into brain circuitry controlling aggression. |
Q26991923 | Neurotrophins in the ventral tegmental area: Role in social stress, mood disorders and drug abuse |
Q38100655 | Olfaction and olfactory-mediated behaviour in psychiatric disease models |
Q36868021 | Ominous odors: olfactory control of instinctive fear and aggression in mice |
Q36050761 | Optogenetics, sex, and violence in the brain: implications for psychiatry |
Q47714713 | Oxytocin and Aggression |
Q40136625 | Phenotypic differences in behavior, physiology and neurochemistry between rats selected for tameness and for defensive aggression towards humans |
Q37086657 | Pubertal activation of estrogen receptor α in the medial amygdala is essential for the full expression of male social behavior in mice |
Q26849324 | Recent advances in understanding the role of the hypothalamic circuit during aggression |
Q30583718 | Scalable control of mounting and attack by Esr1+ neurons in the ventromedial hypothalamus |
Q46335352 | Sex Differences in the Regulation of Offensive Aggression and Dominance by Arginine-Vasopressin |
Q40047762 | Social behavior in deer mice as a novel interactive paradigm of relevance for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). |
Q35581603 | Social behavior of offspring following prenatal cocaine exposure in rodents: a comparison with prenatal alcohol |
Q89479199 | The effect of left and right long-term amygdala kindling on interictal emotionality and Fos expression |
Q35992397 | The imposition of, but not the propensity for, social subordination impairs exploratory behaviors and general cognitive abilities |
Q37063916 | The resident-intruder paradigm: a standardized test for aggression, violence and social stress |
Q26851991 | The role of behavior in translational models for psychopathology: functionality and dysfunctional behaviors |
Q36973989 | The role of prior stressor controllability and the dorsal raphé nucleus in sucrose preference and social exploration |
Q37218200 | Traumatic brain injury - modeling neuropsychiatric symptoms in rodents |
Q30497577 | Unravelling the neurophysiological basis of aggression in a fish model |
Q24656284 | Vasopressin: behavioral roles of an "original" neuropeptide |
Q35229719 | Viral depletion of VTA BDNF in rats modulates social behavior, consequences of intermittent social defeat stress, and long-term weight regulation |
Search more.