Exact(11)
This provides a parsimonious explanation to the observations that (i) unfamiliar CHC patterns (including both quantitative and qualitative differences from the colony odor) trigger aggression, and (ii) this aggressive response fades after prolonged exposure [31] [32].
Paul Adams, an emergency room doctor, said that synthetic stimulant drugs such as bath salts, named for its powdery substance, can make users feel invincible and give them superhuman strength, but can also trigger aggression, extreme paranoia and hallucinations.
[Waiting] time is a major factor, in addition to intoxication and pain… there are a number of flash points which can trigger aggression… Any intervention has to be considered to terms of its practical application within the ED".
It responds well to familiar dogs, but when multiple dogs are present, establishing a pecking order can trigger aggression.
Pheromones, a type of semiochemical, are used for attracting mates of the opposite sex, for aggregating conspecific individuals of both sexes, for deterring other individuals from approaching, to mark a trail, and to trigger aggression in nearby individuals.
Thus, both qualitative and quantitative changes to the hydrocarbon profile can trigger aggression among colonymates.
Similar(49)
The script (by Affleck and Aaron Stockard) follows suit, catching the profane, sarcastic backchat and hair-trigger aggression of working-class Boston: you wouldn't want to look the wrong way at anyone around these parts.
Whether it's "Faces" — the 1968 film that is more or less his "Portnoy's Complaint," a great liberation in style, subject, and tone — or "Husbands" or "Opening Night," he's filming the upwardly mobile children of immigrants, the rising suburban bourgeoisie whose high-strung striving comes with a hair-trigger aggression as well as a tightly restrained vitality.
"In closed spaces, if there are seven people or more talking all at the same time, everything feels like it's pushing in on me, and that triggers aggression," he said.
Emerging evidence has suggested locally synthesized but not systemic T and estrogen in the brain play a major role in triggering aggression in song sparrows during the non-breeding season [18], [19].
In another experimental study, in which copaiba oil was instilled in the peritoneal cavity, the macroscopic alterations observed were similar to those found in the pleura, thus showing that copaiba oleoresin triggers aggression in the serosa with a corresponding formation of adherences in the process to repair the injury [ 27].
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