TY - JOUR
T1 - Chronic Inhibition of Aggressive Behavior Induces Behavioral Change in Mice
AU - Ueno, Hiroshi
AU - Takahashi, Yu
AU - Murakami, Shinji
AU - Wani, Kenta
AU - Miyazaki, Tetsuji
AU - Matsumoto, Yosuke
AU - Okamoto, Motoi
AU - Ishihara, Takeshi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Hiroshi Ueno et al.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Suppression of anger is more common than its expression among Asian individuals. Emotional suppression is considered an unhealthy emotional regulation. Most studies on emotional suppression have concluded that suppression adversely affects social outcomes, with approximately 5% of the world's population suffering from emotional disorders. However, anger suppression has not received academic attention, and details of the effects of chronic anger suppression on the central nervous system remain unclear. In this study, we performed the resident-intruder test to investigate the effect of chronic suppression of aggressive behavior in mice using a behavioral test battery and to clarify whether suppression of this aggressive behavior is stressful for mice. Mice chronically inhibited aggressive behavior and lost weight. Mice with inhibited aggressive behavior showed a reduced percentage of immobility time during the tail suspension test as well as no changes in activity, anxiety-like behavior, muscle strength, or temperature sensitivity. This study provides scientific evidence for the effects of chronic aggressive behavior inhibition on the body and central nervous system.
AB - Suppression of anger is more common than its expression among Asian individuals. Emotional suppression is considered an unhealthy emotional regulation. Most studies on emotional suppression have concluded that suppression adversely affects social outcomes, with approximately 5% of the world's population suffering from emotional disorders. However, anger suppression has not received academic attention, and details of the effects of chronic anger suppression on the central nervous system remain unclear. In this study, we performed the resident-intruder test to investigate the effect of chronic suppression of aggressive behavior in mice using a behavioral test battery and to clarify whether suppression of this aggressive behavior is stressful for mice. Mice chronically inhibited aggressive behavior and lost weight. Mice with inhibited aggressive behavior showed a reduced percentage of immobility time during the tail suspension test as well as no changes in activity, anxiety-like behavior, muscle strength, or temperature sensitivity. This study provides scientific evidence for the effects of chronic aggressive behavior inhibition on the body and central nervous system.
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U2 - 10.1155/2022/7630779
DO - 10.1155/2022/7630779
M3 - Article
C2 - 36619803
AN - SCOPUS:85145968928
SN - 0016-6723
VL - 2022
JO - Genetical Research
JF - Genetical Research
M1 - 7630779
ER -