“…Animals exhibit a range of aggressive behaviors (Blanchard et al, 2003; Moyer, 1968) essential for survival, reproduction, and social hierarchy establishment (Nelson and Trainor, 2007), while pathological aggression and the inability to control aggressive states cause serious social problems (Coccaro, 2012; Davidson, 2000; Siegel and Victoroff, 2009). Distinct regions in the mouse brain have been shown to be essential for male (Chamero et al, 2007; Hong et al, 2014; Lee et al, 2014; Leroy et al, 2018; Lin et al, 2011; Stagkourakis et al, 2018; Stowers et al, 2002; Todd et al, 2018; Unger et al, 2015; Yang et al, 2013; Yang et al, 2017; Zelikowsky et al, 2018), female (Hashikawa et al, 2017; Unger et al, 2015), predatory (Han et al, 2017; Li et al, 2018; Park et al, 2018; Shang et al, 2019; Zhao et al, 2019), and infant-directed (Autry et al, 2019; Chen et al, 2019; Isogai et al, 2018; Trouillet et al, 2019) aggressive behaviors. Furthermore, studies from some brain regions that have been examined for more than one type of aggressive behaviors suggest that different behaviors are regulated by distinct, dedicated neural circuits under specific internal and external conditions (Chen and Hong, 2018; Chen et al, 2019; Han et al, 2017; Hashikawa et al, 2017; Isogai et al, 2018; Yang et al, 2017; Zelikowsky et al, 2018).…”