1. Familiarity modulates social approach toward stressed conspecifics in female rats
- Author
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Anthony Djerdjaj, Amelia R. Culp, Morgan M. Rogers-Carter, Joshua A. Elbaz, and John P. Christianson
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Emotions ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,Social identity approach ,Developmental psychology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cell Signaling ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Psychological stress ,Female test ,Emotion contagion ,lcsh:Science ,Mammals ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Animal Behavior ,Behavior, Animal ,Physics ,Eukaryota ,Animal Models ,Signaling Cascades ,Preference ,Sprague dawley ,Experimental Organism Systems ,Animal Sociality ,Vertebrates ,Physical Sciences ,Female ,Cues ,Research Article ,Signal Transduction ,Decision Making ,Psychological Stress ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Rodents ,Stress Signaling Cascade ,03 medical and health sciences ,Model Organisms ,Preference test ,Mental Health and Psychiatry ,Acoustic Signals ,medicine ,Animals ,Social Behavior ,030304 developmental biology ,Behavior ,lcsh:R ,Organisms ,Cognitive Psychology ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Recognition, Psychology ,Cell Biology ,Acoustics ,Rats ,030104 developmental biology ,Amniotes ,Cognitive Science ,lcsh:Q ,Zoology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience ,Social behavior - Abstract
Familiarity between conspecifics may influence how social affective cues shape social behaviors. In a social affective preference test, experimental rats, when given the choice to explore an unfamiliar stressed or a naive adult, will avoid interaction with a stressed conspecific. To determine if familiarity would influence social interactions with stressed conspecifics, male and female test rats underwent 2 social affective preference tests in isosexual triads where an experimental rat was presented with a naïve and a stressed target conspecific who were either familiar (cagemate) or unfamiliar. Male and female experimental rats avoided stressed unfamiliar conspecifics. However, experimental female rats demonstrated a preference to interact with their stressed, familiar cagemates. Male and female rats exhibited more self-grooming and immobility behavior in the presence of stressed conspecifics, which may indicate emotion contagion. These findings suggest a sex-specific role of familiarity in social approach and avoidance, and warrant further mechanistic exploration.
- Published
- 2018