Theses Doctoral

The neuroethology of coordinated aggression in Siamese fighting fish, Betta splendens

Everett, Claire Pickslay

Animals coordinate their behavior with each other during cooperative and agonistic social interactions. Such coordination often adopts the form of “turn-taking”, in which the interactive partners alternate the performance of a behavior. Apart from acoustic communication, how turn taking is coordinated, is not well known. Furthermore, the neural substrates that regulate persistence in engaging in social interactions are poorly studied. Here, we use Siamese fighting fish (Betta splendens), to study visually-driven turn-taking aggressive behavior.

Using encounters with real conspecifics and with computer animations, we discover the visual cues from an opponent and the behavioral dynamics that generate turn taking. Through a brain-wide screen of neuronal activity during aggressive behavior, followed by targeted brain lesions, we then discover that the caudal portion of the dorsomedial telencephalon, an amygdala-like region, promotes continuous participation in aggressive interactions. Our work highlights how dynamic visual cues shape the rhythm of social interactions at multiple timescales and points to the pallial amygdala as a region controlling the drive to engage in such interactions.

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More About This Work

Academic Units
Neurobiology and Behavior
Thesis Advisors
Bendesky, Andres
Degree
Ph.D., Columbia University
Published Here
April 30, 2024