Literature DB >> 26802729

Stop or move: Defensive strategies in humans.

Aline F Bastos1, Andre S Vieira2, Jose M Oliveira2, Leticia Oliveira3, Mirtes G Pereira3, Ivan Figueira4, Fatima S Erthal2, Eliane Volchan2.   

Abstract

Threatening cues and surrounding contexts trigger specific defensive response patterns. Potential threat evokes attentive immobility; attack evokes flight when escape is available and immobility when escape is blocked. Tonic immobility installs when threat is overwhelming and life-risky. In humans, reduced body sway characterizes attentive and tonic immobility, the former with bradycardia, and the later with expressive tachycardia. Here, we investigate human defensive strategies in the presence or absence of an escape route. We employed pictures depicting a man carrying a gun and worked with participants exposed to urban violence. In pictures simulating more possibility of escape, the gun was directed away from the observer; in those simulating higher risk and less chance of escape, the gun was directed toward the observer. Matched control pictures depicted similar layouts, but a non-lethal object substituted the gun. Posturographic and electrocardiographic recordings were collected. Amplitude of sway and heart rate were higher for gun directed-away and lower for gun direct-toward. Compared to their respective matched controls, there was a general increase in the amplitude of sway for the gun directed-away pictures; and a reduction in back-and-forth sway and in heart rate for gun directed-toward pictures. Taken together, those measures suggest that, when exposed to threat invading their margin of safety in a context indicating possible escape route, humans, as non-human species, engage in active escape, resembling the flight stage of the defensive cascade. When facing threat indicating less possibility of escape, humans present an immobile response with bradycardia.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Body posture; Defensive responses; Escape; Freezing; Heart rate; Immobility

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26802729     DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2016.01.043

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Brain Res        ISSN: 0166-4328            Impact factor:   3.332


  6 in total

1.  Centralized gaze as an adaptive component of defensive states in humans.

Authors:  Alma-Sophia Merscher; Philip Tovote; Paul Pauli; Matthias Gamer
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2.  During vigilance to painful stimuli: slower response rate is related to high trait anxiety, whereas faster response rate is related to high state anxiety.

Authors:  Timothy J Meeker; Nichole M Emerson; Jui-Hong Chien; Mark I Saffer; Oscar Joseph Bienvenu; Anna Korzeniewska; Joel D Greenspan; Frederick Arthur Lenz
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2020-12-16       Impact factor: 2.714

3.  Assessing Post-Traumatic Tonic Immobility Responses: The Scale for Tonic Immobility Occurring Post-Trauma.

Authors:  Chantelle S Lloyd; Ruth A Lanius; Matthew F Brown; Richard J Neufeld; Paul A Frewen; Margaret C McKinnon
Journal:  Chronic Stress (Thousand Oaks)       Date:  2019-01-28

4.  How do you perceive threat? It's all in your pattern of brain activity.

Authors:  Orlando Fernandes; Liana Catrina Lima Portugal; Rita de Cássia S Alves; Tiago Arruda-Sanchez; Eliane Volchan; Mirtes Garcia Pereira; Janaina Mourão-Miranda; Letícia Oliveira
Journal:  Brain Imaging Behav       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 3.978

5.  Defensive functions provoke similar psychophysiological reactions in reaching and comfort spaces.

Authors:  G Ruggiero; M Rapuano; A Cartaud; Y Coello; T Iachini
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-03-04       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Interactions between emotion and action in the brain.

Authors:  Liana Catarina Lima Portugal; Rita de Cássia Soares Alves; Orlando Fernandes Junior; Tiago Arruda Sanchez; Izabela Mocaiber; Eliane Volchan; Fátima Smith Erthal; Isabel Antunes David; Jongwan Kim; Leticia Oliveira; Srikanth Padmala; Gang Chen; Luiz Pessoa; Mirtes Garcia Pereira
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2020-03-19       Impact factor: 6.556

  6 in total

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