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Watching Familiar Fights Makes Male Mice Aggressive, Study Finds

The work traces the effect to medial amygdala neurons with causal control over later attacks.

Overview

  • A peer-reviewed Journal of Neuroscience paper published Sept. 8 reports that observing familiar peers attack increases subsequent aggression in male mice.
  • In the paradigm, mice watched 10-minute fights and were tested for aggressive behavior 30 minutes later under controlled laboratory conditions.
  • The effect depended on social familiarity and sex, with only males showing increased aggression after witnessing known cage-mates, not strangers.
  • Recordings showed activation of aggression-priming neurons in the medial amygdala during observation of familiar attacks, identifying a discrete circuit.
  • Silencing these neurons prevented the learned aggression, while activating them promoted later attacks even after watching strangers, suggesting potential therapeutic targets the authors say warrant further study.