Multiple species display robust behavioral variance among individuals due to genetic, genomic, epigenetic, neuroplasticity and environmental factors. Behavioral individuality has been extensively studied in various animal models, including rodents and other mammals. Recently, fish, such zebrafish (Danio rerio), have emerged as powerful aquatic model organisms with overt individual differences in behavioral, nociceptive and other CNS traits. Here, we evaluate individual behavioral differences in mammals and fish, emphasizing the importance of crossspecies analyses of intraspecies variance in experimental models of normal and pathological CNS functions.