Elsevier

Neurobiology of Stress

Volume 6, February 2017, Pages 104-112
Neurobiology of Stress

Social stress models in rodents: Towards enhanced validity

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2016.09.003Get rights and content
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open access

Abstract

Understanding the role of the social environment in the development of stress related diseases requires a more fundamental understanding of stress. Stress includes not only the stimulus and the response but also the individual appraisal of the situation. The social environment is not only essential for survival it is at the same time an important source of stressors. This review discusses the social stress concept, how it has been studied in rodents in the course of time and some more recent insights into the appraisal process. In addition to the factors controllability and predictability, outcome expectancy and feedback of the victim's own actions during the social stress are suggested to be important factors in the development of stress related disease. It is hypothesized that individual differences in the way in which these factors are used in the appraisal of everyday life situations may explain individual vulnerability.

Keywords

Appraisal stress
Controllability
Predictability
Expectancy
Feedback
Corticosterone
Noradrenaline
Adrenaline

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