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A conserved brainstem region for instinctive behaviour control: The vertebrate periaqueductal gray

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Stempel,  A. Vanessa       
Instinctive Behaviour Circuits, Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Stempel, A. V. (2024). A conserved brainstem region for instinctive behaviour control: The vertebrate periaqueductal gray. Curr. Opin.Neurobiol., 86: 102878.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000F-3E0D-F
Abstract
Instinctive behaviours have evolved across animal phyla and ensure the survival of both the individual and species. They include behaviours that achieve defence, feeding, aggression, sexual reproduction, or parental care. Within the vertebrate subphylum, the brain circuits that support instinctive behaviour output are evolutionarily conserved, being present in the oldest group of living vertebrates, the lamprey. Here, I will provide an evolutionary and comparative perspective on the function of a conserved brainstem region central to the initiation and execution of virtually all instinctive behaviours-the periaqueductal gray. In particular, I will focus on recent advances on the neural mechanisms in the periaqueductal gray that underlie the production of different instinctive behaviours within and across species.