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The Study of Instinct Unraveling the neurobiological basis of behavior
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The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Jan 15, 2022

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Page 1: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

The Study of Instinct

Unraveling the neurobiological

basis of behavior

Page 2: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Outline

• Part I: basic concepts in the study of the biological basis of behavior

• Part II: modern tools for studying behavior

• Part III: recent discoveries in the neurobiology of behavior;

implications for human health.

Page 3: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Motivation

Page 4: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Outline

• Part I: Basic concepts in the study of the biological basis of behavior

• Part II: modern tools for studying behavior

• Part III: recent discoveries in the neurobiology of behavior and

implications for human health

Page 5: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Behavior

the total movements made by an

intact animal.

Basic concepts of behavior

External and internal stimuli

• external = things in our

surrounding environment

• internal = our “drives” and

motivations (e.g. hunger, thirst)

Innate or instinctive behaviors

those that are not changed through

learning.

Page 6: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Ethological approach

• Pros: observe whole animal

in natural environment.

• Cons: subjective; lacks

mechanistic insight.

Neurophysiological approach

• Pros: controlled experiments;

rigorous and quantitative

• Cons: Constrained, non-

naturalistic conditions.

Two historical approaches to studying behavior

Page 7: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

The four Fs of evolution

• Fighting

• And…

• Fleeing

• Feeding

Page 8: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Drive, homeostasis, and valence

• Homeostasis: The regulation of biological

systems such that internal conditions remain

stable, at some predetermined “set point.”

• Hunger, thirst, mating, sleep, thermoregulation,

etc. are universal motivational drives.

• Things that bring us closer to our set point take

on a positive valence (good/pleasurable)

• Things that move us away from our set points

take on a negative valence (bad/unpleasant)

Page 9: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Homeostasis, drive, and valence

Page 10: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

• Hypothalamic neurons controlling basic drives integrate information from the brain and body.

The hypothalamus contains circuits

controlling our basic drives

• Achieve this by sending neural signals to multiple brain regions in parallel.

• Drive circuits coordinate the brain and body in order to produce adaptive behaviors.

external stimuli

internal stimuli

Page 11: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Questions?

• Part I: Basic concepts in the study of the biological basis of behavior

• Part II: modern approaches to the study of behavior

• Part III: recent discoveries in the neurobiology of behavior and

implications for human health

Page 12: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Outline

• Part I: Basic concepts in the study of the biological basis of behavior

• Part II: modern tools for studying of behavior

• Part III: recent discoveries in the neurobiology of behavior

Page 13: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

“Turn to Right”

Unbiased methods for observing behavior

Data courtesy of Alex Wiltschko, PhD

Page 14: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Unbiased methods for observing behavior

Objective classification of behaviors

Page 15: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Rear and

Turn

Run, Forrest,

Run

Sway

Walk

Pause

Unbiased methods for observing behavior

Hunch

And Freeze

Hunting

Dog

Data courtesy of Alex Wiltschko, PhD

Page 16: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Measuring neural activity: calcium imaging

Page 17: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Measuring neural activity: calcium imaging

Page 18: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Controlling neural activity: optogenetics

Genetically engineered

animal + fiber optic

Page 19: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Questions?

• Part I: Basic concepts in the study of the biological basis of behavior

• Part II: modern approaches to the study of behavior

• Part III: recent discoveries in the neurobiology of behavior and

implications for human health

Page 20: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Outline

• Part I: Basic concepts in the study of the biological basis of behavior

• Part II: modern approaches to the study of behavior

• Part III: recent discoveries in the neurobiology of behavior

Page 21: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Optogenetic control of “hunger neurons”

Genetically engineered

animal + fiber optic

Laser OFF Laser ON Laser OFF

30 min. 30 min. 30 min.

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

Foo

d c

onsum

ption

(g

ram

s)

Page 22: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

“Hunger neurons” carry a negative valence

Page 23: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Optogenetic control of “aggression neurons”

Video courtesy of Dr. Dayu Lin (NYU)

Page 24: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Conclusions

• The hypothalamus is a key brain region

controlling the basic motivational drives

common to all animals.

• New technologies allow neuroscientists to

rigorously observe behavior, record neural

activity, and manipulate neurons in awake,

behaving animals.

• Techniques such as optogenetics allow us

to attribute causality to specific brain

circuits in the control of motivational drives

Page 25: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Clinical applications… and beyond?

• Therapy – variable effectiveness; doesn’t work for

certain problems, e.g. epilepsy, neurodegeneration

• Drugs – Variable effectiveness, commonly have

multiple side effects

• Surgery – Highly invasive; irreversible.

Page 26: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Clinical applications… and beyond?

• …in principle, could also control more

“psychological” traits e.g. depression,

aggression.

• Optogenetic therapies?

• Recently used to control pain in mice;

opiates are common treatment in

humans

• Reversibly “turn off” parts of the

brain, e.g. intractable epilepsy

Credit: Image Source: Jose Grajales-Reyes (Gereau Lab)

Page 27: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Acknowledgements

• Co-directors: Steph Guerra, Katie Wu ([email protected])

• Seminar series directors: Jordan Wilkerson, Stephen Portillo

• Graphics artist: Olivia Foster

www.sitn.hms.harvard.edu

Page 28: The Study of Instinct - Harvard University

Questions?

www.sitn.hms.harvard.edu

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