“…Our laboratory uses a model in which a subset of rats exposed to predator odor stress show persistent and stable avoidance of odor-paired stimuli (context with distinct tactile and visual cues), mirroring avoidance symptoms in some but not all humans exposed to stress (Breslau, 2009;Albrechet-Souza and Gilpin, 2019). After stress, rats classified as Avoiders exhibit hyperalgesia (Itoga et al, 2016), escalated alcohol drinking, more aversion-resistant alcohol responding (Edwards et al, 2013;Weera et al, 2020), higher anxiety-like behavior than unstressed controls (Whitaker and Gilpin, 2015), and blunted corticosterone response to predator odor relative to Non-Avoiders exposed to the same stress (Whitaker and Gilpin, 2015). These effects are not attributable to non-specific factors such as learning or animals' ability to detect the predator odor stimulus.…”