“…Thigmotaxis or centrophobism, i.e., the tendency of animals to avoid the center area of an open field or arena and instead to spend more time in its periphery, is a behavioral response that is evolutionary conserved from Drosophila ( Besson and Martin, 2005 ; Mohammad et al, 2016 ) to zebrafish ( Colwill and Creton, 2011 ; Richendrfer et al, 2012 ; Schnörr et al, 2012 ; Pietri et al, 2013 ; Zhang et al, 2017 ; Xu and Guo, 2020 ) and mammals ( Hall, 1934 ; Denenberg, 1969 ; Treit and Fundytus, 1988 ; Prut and Belzung, 2003 ), including humans ( Walz et al, 2016 ; Gromer et al, 2021 ). Although a natural behavioral tendency across species, it has been suggested that thigmotaxis is indicative of an anxiety-like state in both larval and adult zebrafish ( Maximino et al, 2010 ; Richendrfer et al, 2012 ; Schnörr et al, 2012 ; Pietri et al, 2013 ; Zhang et al, 2017 ; Abreu et al, 2020 ; Xu and Guo, 2020 ).…”