
Fear protects us in a world full of dangers. This is particularly evident in small rodents, such as mice, which exhibit various reactions to threats: freezing, flight or - as a last resort - defensive attack. In recent decades, researchers including Andreas Lüthi of the FMI have investigated the processes in the brain which give rise to fear, and how fear is learned. But it has not been clear to date how the state of fear triggers a response which extends all the way to the muscles.
These processes have now been studied by Philip Tovote, a postdoctoral fellow at the FMI, in collaboration with other members of Andreas Lüthi's group and with Soledad Esposito from Silvia Arber's group; their findings were published in Nature today. Using modern neuroanatomical tracing methods in combination with physiological approaches, the researchers identified neurons in the midbrain that are activated during freezing. They then identified an output pathway leading to a medullary area involved in motor control. At the same time, they identified a pathway leading from the central nucleus of the amygdala (the forebrain structure controlling fear responses) to the midbrain. Lüthi explains:
"We've now defined the neuronal circuitry underlying the execution of freezing, from the central nucleus of the amygdala to the neurons that control our muscles."Often, the behavioral response to a threat needs to be rapidly adapted; for example, there may be a switch from freezing to flight. The researchers therefore investigated whether and how freezing is influenced by the flight pathway. Tovote comments:
"There is evidence that the circuit that triggers freezing interacts with the flight circuit. Not only are neurons from the two circuits anatomically connected, but there is also functional interaction."Evolutionarily conserved strategies for coping with fear - essential for survival - are deployed by a wide variety of species. Similar mechanisms exist in humans. Lüthi concludes:
"It's conceivable that malfunction of the circuitry we've identified also plays a role in people with anxiety disorders."More information: Tovote P, Esposito MS, Botta P, Chaudun F, Fadok JP, Markovic M, Wolff SBE, Ramakrishnan C, Fenno L, Deisseroth K, Herry C, Arber S, Lüthi A (2016) Midbrain circuits for defensive behavior. Nature advance online publication,nature.com/articles/doi:10.1038/nature17996
Journal reference: Nature



This is why armies have have lots of training
Some general rules of thumb for and from a rough life:
Trust your instincts (e.g., hair standing up on neck, etc.)
NEVER PANIC!!!
Never assume guy with gun can't or WON'T kill you. If he's got 'the drop' on you, throw your wallet and keys to him and haul ass if you can..
The natural reaction is to 'freeze.' Only do that when as above and ordered to freeze or be shot by someone A) with a handgun and close; OR, B) by someone with a rifle or shotgun if you can hear them well. (This varies, of course.)
If someone is shooting at you, haul ass away from them in an ERRATIC “zig zag” motion (e.g., 3 steps angling right 4 to the left, 1 to the left, 5 to right), with turns generally at less than 45 degree angles but always getting farther away. Distance and real Cover are safety.
Once in such situation, NEVER LOSE YOUR EYES - keep track of the evil one til you're far enough away!!!
If you're fairly sure the bad guy can't see you and doesn't know where you are, don't move if he can see the motion.
The rules are different and you have a firearm. If you have one, learn them.
R.C.