首页|Neurocircuitry of Predatory Hunting

Neurocircuitry of Predatory Hunting

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Predatory hunting is an important type of innate behavior evolutionarily conserved across the animal king-dom.It is typically composed of a set of sequential actions,including prey search,pursuit,attack,and consumption.This behavior is subject to control by the nervous system.Early studies used toads as a model to probe the neuroethology of hunting,which led to the proposal of a sensory-triggered release mechanism for hunting actions.More recent stud-ies have used genetically-trackable zebrafish and rodents and have made breakthrough discoveries in the neuroethol-ogy and neurocircuits underlying this behavior.Here,we review the sophisticated neurocircuitry involved in hunting and summarize the detailed mechanism for the circuitry to encode various aspects of hunting neuroethology,including sensory processing,sensorimotor transformation,motiva-tion,and sequential encoding of hunting actions.We also discuss the overlapping brain circuits for hunting and feed-ing and point out the limitations of current studies.We pro-pose that hunting is an ideal behavioral paradigm in which to study the neuroethology of motivated behaviors,which may shed new light on epidemic disorders,including binge-eating,obesity,and obsessive-compulsive disorders.

Predatory huntingNeurocircuitsSensory processingSensorimotor transformationAppetitive motivationSequential encoding

Zheng-Dong Zhao、Li Zhang、Xinkuan Xiang、Daesoo Kim、Haohong Li、Peng Cao、Wei L.Shen

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School of Life Science and Technology,ShanghaiTech University,Shanghai 201210,China

Boston Children's Hospital,Harvard Medical School,Boston,MA 02115,USA

National Institute of Biological Sciences(NIBS),Beijing 102206,China

Britton Chance Center for Biomedical Photonics,Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics,Huazhong University of Science and Technology,Wuhan 430074,China

MoE Key Laboratory for Biomedical Photonics,Collaborative Innovation Center for Biomedical Engineering,School of Engineering Sciences,Huazhong University of Science and Technology,Wuhan 430074,China

Department of Cognitive Brain Science,Korea Advanced Institute of Science&Technology,Daejeon 34141,South Korea

MOE Frontier Research Center of Brain&Brain-machine Integration,School of Brain Science and Brain Medicine,Zhejiang University,Hangzhou 310058,China

Affiliated Mental Health Centre and Hangzhou Seventh People`s Hospital,Zhejiang University School of Medicine,Hangzhou 310013,China

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2023

神经科学通报(英文版)
中国科学院上海生命科学研究院

神经科学通报(英文版)

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影响因子:0.741
ISSN:1673-7067
年,卷(期):2023.39(5)
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