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Aggressive Behavior Evoked by Radio Stimulation in Monkey Colonies
Authors:DELGADO  JOSE M R
Institution:Deparement of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine New Haven, Connecticut
Abstract:Macaca mulatta with multilead electrodes permanently implantedin the brain were electrically stimulated, either under restraint,or by radio while moving freely as part of a colony, in whichcase individual and social behavior were recorded, analyzed,and quantified with the aid of time-lapse photography. Somecerebral radio stimulations evoked complex sequences of wellorganized responses. Increase in running and in offensive behaviorwas produced by excitation of midline thalamus, while even fasterrunning without changes in aggressiveness was produced by stimulationof the fimbria of the fornix. Conditioning was absent in thefirst case, but it was easily established in the latter. Increasein aggressive behavior was also produced by stimulation of Forel'sfield, the nucleus ventralis posterior lateralis of the thalamus,and the central gray matter. Increase in aggressiveness wasoriented by the animal according to past experience, likes anddislikes, and was adapted to the changing strategies of itsopponent, indicating an excellent processing of sensory information,and demonstrating that brain stimulation had induced a "drive"and not a stereotyped motor response. As a working hypothesis it is proposed that cerebral mechanismsfor perception of pain and for aggressive behavior have differentanatomical and physiological systems closely interrelated byuse, disuse, and conditioning.
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