Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-15-2015
Abstract
Virtually all animals have endogenous clock mechanisms that “entrain” to the light-dark (LD) cycle and synchronize psychophysiological functions to optimal times for exploring resources and avoiding dangers in the environment. Such circadian rhythms are vital to human mental health, but it is unknown whether circadian rhythms “entrained” to the LD cycle can be overridden by entrainment to daily recurring threats. We show that unsignaled nocturnal footshock caused rats living in an “ethological” apparatus to switch their natural foraging behavior from the dark to the light phase and that this switch was maintained as a free-running circadian rhythm upon removal of light cues and footshocks. Furthermore, this fear-entrained circadian behavior was dependent on an intact amygdala and suprachiasmatic nucleus. Thus, time-specific fear can act as a non-photic entraining stimulus for the circadian system and limbic centers encoding aversive information are likely part of the circadian oscillator network that temporally organizes behavior.
Recommended Citation
Pellman, Blake A.; Kim, Earnest S.; Reilly, Melissa; Kashima, James; Motch, Oleksiy; de la Iglesia, Horacio O.; and Kim, Jeansok J., "Time-Specific Fear Acts as a Non-Photic Entraining Stimulus of Circadian Rhythms in Rats" (2015). Faculty Publications - Psychology Department. 86.
https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/psyc_fac/86
Comments
Originally published in Scientific Reports, Article 14916, October 15th 2015
https://doi.org/10.1038/srep14916