Regulation of the stress response by social buffering : a review across species
Regulation of the stress response by social buffering : a review across species
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Date
2021
Authors
Avellaneda, Matias Alejandro
Kamenetsky, Giselle
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Revista interamericana de Psicología / Interamerican Journal of Psychology
Abstract
This review presents a critical reading of the literature on social buffering in human and non-human animals. The term social buffering has been coined to refer to an attenuation of stress responses by the presence of conspecifics. Evidence shows that the buffer seems to be specific for each stage of development, being the mother the factor that attenuates the stress responses during early development and conspecifics of the same age, later in life. An animal model of scarcity of resources revealed that when being reared by a stressed mother, the social buffering effect does not occur. The literature reviewed allows us to approach a key factor related to stress and its effects in the different stages of ontogeny.
Description
Keywords
stress,
social buffering,
scarcity model,
odor,
respondent conditioning
Citation
Avellaneda, M. A. & Kamenetzky, G. (2021). Regulation of the stress response by social buffering : a review across species. In: Revista interamericana de Psicología / Interamerican Journal of Psychology, 55(1), e1439.