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Aggression
as rewarding as sex, food and drugs
Newswise — New research from Vanderbilt
University shows for the first time that the
brain processes aggression as a reward -
much like sex, food and drugs - offering
insights into our propensity to fight and
our fascination with violent sports like
boxing and football.
The research will be published online the
week of Jan. 14 by the journal
Psychopharmacology.
“Aggression occurs among virtually all
vertebrates and is necessary to get and keep
important resources such as mates, territory
and food,” Craig Kennedy, professor of
special education and pediatrics, said.
“We have found that the ‘reward pathway’ in
the brain becomes engaged in response to an
aggressive event and that dopamine is
involved.”
“It is well known that dopamine is produced
in response to rewarding stimuli such as
food, sex and drugs of abuse,” Maria Couppis,
who conducted the study as her doctoral
thesis at Vanderbilt, said. “What we have
now found is that it also serves as positive
reinforcement for aggression.”
For the experiments, a pair of mice - one
male, one female - was kept in one cage and
five “intruder” mice were kept in a separate
cage.
The female mouse was temporarily removed,
and an intruder mouse was introduced in its
place, triggering an aggressive response by
the “home” male mouse.
Aggressive behavior included tail rattle, an
aggressive sideways stance, boxing and
biting.
The home mouse was then trained to poke a
target with its nose to get the intruder to
return, at which point it again behaved
aggressively toward it.
The home mouse consistently poked the
trigger, which was presented once a day,
indicating it experienced the aggressive
encounter with the intruder as a reward.
The same home mice were then treated with a
drug that suppressed their dopamine
receptors. After this treatment, they
decreased the frequency with which they
instigated the intruder’s entry.
In a separate experiment, the mice were
treated with the dopamine receptor
suppressors again and their movements in an
open cage were observed.
They
showed no significant changes in overall
movement compared to times when they had not
received the drugs.
This was done to demonstrate that their
decreased aggression in the previous
experiment was not caused by overall
lethargy in response to the drug, a problem
that had confounded previous experiments.
The Vanderbilt experiments are the first to
demonstrate a link between behavior and the
activity of dopamine receptors in response
to an aggressive event.
“We learned from these experiments that an
individual will intentionally seek out an
aggressive encounter solely because they
experience a rewarding sensation from it,”
Kennedy said. “This shows for the first time
that aggression, on its own, is motivating,
and that the well-known positive reinforcer
dopamine plays a critical role.”
Kennedy is chair of Vanderbilt’s Peabody
College of education and human development’s
special education department, which is
consistently ranked as the top special
education program in the nation. He is also
director of the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center
for Research of Human Development’s Behavior
Analysis Clinic.
Couppis conducted her research in
affiliation with the Vanderbilt Brain
Institute. She is also affiliated with the
Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Research on
Human Development and the Vanderbilt Center
for Integrative and Cognitive Neuroscience.
The research was supported by a Discovery
Grant from Vanderbilt University.