The model proposed here assumes that depressive disorders could reflect an
extreme state of a current behavioral strategy. According to this model, a
subject facing a problem of survival without apparent solution may choose
between two behavioral patterns: searching for a solution or waiting for that
solution to occur. This choice can be made after one or several estimations of
the cost and benefit attached to each of these alternatives. Two of the main
behavioral models of depression are interpreted according to this model: namely,
infant response to maternal separation in monkeys and "behavioral despair" in
rodents. Practical and theoretical consequences of this model are discussed.