Scientists studying on feline temper have ascertained that both human and feline temper originate and is let loose in the brain center.
Scientists studying on feline temper have ascertained that both human and feline temper originate and is let loose in the brain center.
With each such advance in the understanding of the mammalian brain's recipe for rage, scientists seem to be moving closer to developing medications to quell violent behaviour in humans and other mammals.In cats, such therapies may prevent the hissing, back arching, ear retraction, claw extensions and fur standing-on-end that are typical indicators of feline defensive rage.
In humans, related anger reveals itself with road rage, an impulsive form of anger that involves little or no thought.
"In road rage, the person never thinks about what he is doing but just acts in the way he does because he feels that he has been threatened by someone else and the impulsive behaviour represents a way by which he can protect himself from such a threat," Discovery News quoted co-author Allan Siegel, a professor in the Department of Neurology & Neurosciences at New Jersey Medical School in Newark, as saying.
"In reality, his actions are usually much more dangerous to him than to the person whom he perceived cut him off on the road," added Siegel.
Previous studies had shown that anger is centred in the medial hypothalamus region of the brain.
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Siegel says that the protein somehow attaches to a serotonin receptor, which is a critical neurotransmitter that helps inhibit everything from sleep to vomiting to sex and hunger in humans.
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Before long, many neurons in the region start to discharge at a high rate, causing the individual to fall into a rage and behave defensively.
Since wild cats are very territorial, says Siegel, zoo tigers feel threatened and act aggressively whenever they face intruders, whether in zoo or in the wild.
An expert, who did not participate in the research, agreed with the findings outlines in the new study.
“(Because of these determinations), there is a possibility that new targets for therapeutic management of aggressive behaviour in humans can be developed," said Hreday Sapru, director of Neurosurgical Laboratories at the New Jersey Medical School.
"In addition, this discovery may provide a basis for future studies that will unravel the underlying mechanisms of aggression and other related behaviors in animals," Sapru added.
Source-ANI
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