Seed Media Group

Smooth Pebbles

David Dobbs writes on science, medicine, nature, and culture.

Profile

ddsunnysb.jpg Author and journalist David Dobbs writes on science, medicine, and culture for the New York Times Magazine, Slate, Scientific American Mind, and other publications; "Buried Answers," one of his features for the Times Magazine, will appear in Houghton Mifflin's esteemed 2006 Best American Science and Nature Writing. The author of three books (see below), he is currently working on a book about the experience and neurobiology of fear. You can find more of his work at his website.

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

BOOKS by David Dobbs



SMALL%20REEF%20COVER.gif

Reef Madness: Charles Darwin, Alexander Agassiz, and the Meaning of Coral.
Oliver Sacks calls it "brilliantly written, almost unbearably poignant... The coral reef story becomes a microcosm of the conflicts -- between idealism and empiricism, God and evolution -- which were to split science and culture in the nineteenth century, and which still split them today.â€

GreatGulfCover.jpg
The Great Gulf
An epistemological argument disguised as fish fight.

0930031814.01._AA_SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpg
The Northern Forest (with Richard Ober)
An environmental debate misses the most essential relationships in the ecosystem at hand.

Archives

Search this blog

« Unambiguously upside: Wellcome Trust's Biomedical Image Award Winners | Main | Breastfed Babies Bounce Back Better (or: Of Mice & Moms Redux) »

Of Mice and Moms (and the snowball of stress)

Category: Brains and minds
Posted on: August 1, 2006 9:07 PM, by David Dobbs

One of the pleasures of following science is seeing how researchers use old, simple tools to test new questions. In a nice piece of work published in Nature Neuroscience, University of Oklahoma researchers Stephanie Moriceau and Regina Sullivan used learned-fear association in mice to reveal how the stress of maternal abandonment raised rat pups' sensitivity to threats. As ScientificAmerican.com describes the experiment,. Moriceau and Sullivan

tested how baby rats responded to the pairing of an unfamiliar odor--peppermint--and a weak electric shock to their tails. The charge-laced scent attracted the youngest pups without exception while repelling their older siblings of 21 days--the age when rats become fully independent. But young rats between 12 and 15 days old either learned to love the peppermint despite the shock if their mother was present or learned to fear it if she was not. When presented with the odor later in a Y-maze, the mothered pups would invariably move toward it while their motherless counterparts would move away.

The mother's presence, it appeared, reduced the level of the most common stress hormone, corticosterone, making the pups react less fearfully to the tainted scnet — or, to put it another way, her absence elevated those stress hormones, making the pups learn a more fearful lesson from the association of shock and scent.

This doesn't break brand new ground. But it adds a bit of detail to the model of stress and mental health that neuroscientists and endocrinologists like Bruce McEwen have been developing. One stressor or threat magnifies the impact of the next; as you string more together (particularly in the absence of more constructive learning), you gradually tip a creature away from confidence and adventurousness and toward retreat and depression.

Comments

always good to learn that science often confirms what we intuitively suspect. glad to have you aboard, welcome!

Posted by: drcharles | August 2, 2006 3:25 PM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. Comments are moderated for spam, your comment may not appear immediately. Thanks for waiting.)





Having problems commenting? (UPDATED)

Blogs in the Network

Top Five: Most German

Search All Blogs

Science News From:

Science News from NYTimes.com