
Research provides new insight into why some individuals may be more aggressive than others.
Research provides new insight into why some individuals may be more aggressive than others.
By combining a long tradition in behavioral research with new technology, we were finally able to uncover a mechanism for how serotonin might influence aggression.
Dr Molly Crockett, co-first author who worked on the research while a PhD student at the 探花直播 of Cambridge鈥檚 Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute (and currently based at the 探花直播 of Zurich)
Fluctuations of serotonin levels in the brain, which often occur when someone hasn鈥檛 eaten or is stressed, affects brain regions that enable people to regulate anger, new research from the 探花直播 of Cambridge has shown.
Although reduced serotonin levels have previously been implicated in aggression, this is the first study which has shown how this chemical helps regulate behaviour in the brain as well as why some individuals may be more prone to aggression.听 探花直播research findings were published today, 15 September, in the journal Biological Psychiatry.
For the study, healthy volunteers鈥 serotonin levels were altered by manipulating their diet.听 On the serotonin depletion day, they were given a mixture of amino acids that lacked tryptophan, the building block for serotonin. On the placebo day, they were given the same mixture but with a normal amount of tryptophan.
探花直播researchers then scanned the volunteers鈥 brains using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) as they viewed faces with angry, sad, and neutral expressions. Using the fMRI, they were able to measure how different brain regions reacted and communicated with one another when the volunteers viewed angry faces, as opposed to sad or neutral faces.
探花直播research revealed that low brain serotonin made communications between specific brain regions of the emotional limbic system of the brain (a structure called the amygdala) and the frontal lobes weaker compared to those present under normal levels of serotonin. 探花直播findings suggest that when serotonin levels are low, it may be more difficult for the prefrontal cortex to control emotional responses to anger that are generated within the amygdala.
Using a personality questionnaire, they also determined which individuals have a natural tendency to behave aggressively. In these individuals, the communications between the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex was even weaker following serotonin depletion.听 'Weak' communications means that it is more difficult for the prefrontal cortex to control the feelings of anger that are generated within the amygdala when the levels of serotonin are low.听 As a result, those individuals who might be predisposed to aggression were the most sensitive to changes in serotonin depletion.
Dr Molly Crockett, co-first author who worked on the research while a PhD student at Cambridge鈥檚 Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute (and currently based at the 探花直播 of Zurich) said: 鈥淲e've known for decades that serotonin plays a key role in aggression, but it's only very recently that we've had the technology to look into the brain and examine just how serotonin helps us regulate our emotional impulses. By combining a long tradition in behavioral research with new technology, we were finally able to uncover a mechanism for how serotonin might influence aggression.鈥
Dr Luca Passamonti, co-first author who worked on the research while a visiting scientist at the Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit in Cambridge (and currently based at the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR), Unit脿 di Ricerca Neuroimmagini, Catanzaro), said: 鈥淎lthough these results came from healthy volunteers, they are also relevant for a broad range of psychiatric disorders in which violence is a common problem. For example, these results may help to explain the brain mechanisms of a psychiatric disorder known as intermittent explosive disorder (IED). Individuals with IED typically show intense, extreme and uncontrollable outbursts of violence which may be triggered by cues of provocation such as a facial expression of anger.
鈥淲e are hopeful that our research will lead to improved diagnostics as well as better treatments for this and other conditions.鈥
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