Freeze for action: neurobiological mechanisms in animal and human freezing
Google (United States) · Radboud University Nijmegen
Abstract
Upon increasing levels of threat, animals activate qualitatively different defensive modes, including freezing and active fight-or-flight reactions. Whereas freezing is a form of behavioural inhibition accompanied by parasympathetically dominated heart rate deceleration, fight-or-flight reactions are associated with sympathetically driven heart rate acceleration. Despite the potential relevance of freezing for human stress-coping, its phenomenology and neurobiological underpinnings remain largely unexplored in humans. Studies in rodents have shown that freezing depends on amygdala projections to the brainstem (periaqueductal grey). Recent neuroimaging studies in humans have indicated that similar brain regions…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 14.91
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 110
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Amygdala
- Psychology
- Neuroscience
- Periaqueductal gray
- Freezing behavior
- Human studies
- Cognitive psychology
- Medicine