TITLE:
Stereotypic Behavior, Grooming, and Behavioral Disorganization in Animals: Neurobiological and Ethological Perspectives
AUTHORS:
Giorgi Andronikashvili, Mikheil Okujava, Tea Gurashvili, Tamila Bagashvili, Giorgi Kvernadze, Ketevan Gogeshvili, Senera Chipashvili, Nino Akhobadze, Marina Nikolaishvili, Davit Natadze
KEYWORDS:
Stereotypy, Stereotypic Behavior, Behavioral Stereotypes, Fixed Action Pattern, Grooming, Basal Ganglia, Behavioral Disorganization, Fragmentation, Ethology
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Biosciences and Medicines,
Vol.14 No.6,
June
26,
2026
ABSTRACT: Stereotyped and stereotypic behaviors represent related but distinct phenomena in animal behavior. In ethology, organized behavioral sequences such as grooming, mating displays, and prey-capture patterns are often species-typical actions with adaptive value. In contrast, abnormal stereotypy is generally defined as repetitive, morphologically similar behavior with no obvious current goal or function, frequently emerging under restricted, stressful, or impoverished conditions. Behavioral disorganization is used here to describe a loss of normal ordering, coordination, or goal-directed structure within a behavioral sequence, whereas fragmentation refers more specifically to the breakdown of a normally complete sequence into omitted, repeated, interrupted, or incorrectly transitioned elements. These concepts differ from stereotypy because they concern the internal structure and completeness of an action sequence, rather than repetition alone. This review synthesizes classical ethological concepts and neurobiological evidence on fixed action patterns, grooming chains, and behavioral disorganization. Particular attention is given to rodent grooming as a model of sequential motor syntax and to the role of evolutionarily conserved neural systems, including the basal ganglia and associated motivational circuits, in organizing action sequences. The review also discusses how stress, social isolation, neurological dysfunction, and pharmacological manipulation can fragment normally ordered behavioral patterns. By distinguishing adaptive behavioral stereotypes from pathological stereotypy, animal models of grooming and other fixed action patterns may provide useful insight into human neuropsychiatric conditions involving disrupted action sequencing, including obsessive-compulsive disorder, Tourette syndrome, and Parkinsonian syndromes.