“…The hippocampus plays key roles in regulating emotional behavior and stress reactivity via its abundant neural connections with limbic structures that convey emotionally salient information from the environment. It has been shown to contribute to the regulation of anxiety‐like behavior (Bannerman et al, ; Bertoglio et al, ; Engin & Treit, ; Gray & McNaughton, ; McNaughton & Gray, ; Moser & Moser, ) as well as aggression (Ely, Greene, & Henry, ; Kolb & Nonneman, ), sociability (Felix‐Ortiz & Tye, ; Hitti & Siegelbaum, ; Maaswinkel, Baars, Gispen, & Spruijt, ; Maaswinkel, Gispen, & Spruijt, ; Stevenson & Caldwell, ; Zou et al, ), and reactive coping in the Forced Swim Test (FST; West, ). Our prior work with the selectively bred HR/LR rats has demonstrated marked differences across all of these behavioral domains, with LR rats (compared to HRs) generally displaying higher levels of anxiety‐like behavior (Clinton et al, , ; Perez et al, ; Stead et al, ; Turner et al, ), low aggression (Kerman et al, ), less interest in sex (Cummings, Clinton, Perry, Akil, & Becker, ) and social interaction (Cohen et al, ), as well as reactive coping (increased immobility) in the FST (Clinton, Watson, & Akil, ; Garcia‐Fuster et al, ; McCoy et al, ).…”