“…Gilbert and Allan (1998) have used the term 'entrapment' to refer to these inescapable, negative life situations and suggested that low mood, anxiety disorders and depression can be an expression of inability (or believed to be so) to escape from aversive thoughts/feelings or external circumstances (Carvalho et al, 2013). Indeed, the most widely used and effective social stressors in animal models are defeat in aggressive encounters and chronic subordination due to unescapable exposure to the dominant animal, which induce psychopathological changes and depressive-like behavior in male mice, accompanied by consistent alterations of hormonal, physiological, behavioral, immune and metabolic responses (Bartolomucci et al, 2004a(Bartolomucci et al, ,b,c, 2005Razzoli and Bartolomucci, 2016). Because of its congruence with the human condition, the defeat-induced loss of status in mice and rats has been proposed as a model of loss of self-esteem and depression in humans that may parallel human psychiatric disorders related to negative emotions provoked by loss of social role, resources, and adverse social environment (Blanchard et al, 1995a,b;Willner et al, 1995;Marrow and Brain, 1998;Blanchard et al, 2001;Huhman, 2006).…”