Effects of different social experiences on emotional state in mice
Contact Information
Keywords
Viktoria Krakenberg, viktoria.krakenberg@uni-muenster.de
N/A
Abstract
A comprehensive understanding of animals' emotions can be achieved by combining cognitive, behavioural, and physiological measures. Applying such a multi-method approach, we here examined the emotional state of mice after they had made one of three different social experiences: either a mildly "adverse", a "beneficial", or a "neutral" experience. Using a recently established touchscreen paradigm, cognitive judgement bias was assessed twice, once before and once after the respective experience. Anxiety-like behaviour was examined using a standardised battery of behavioural tests and faecal corticosterone metabolite concentrations were measured. Surprisingly, only minor effects of the social experiences on the animals' cognitive judgement bias and no effects on anxiety-like behaviour and corticosterone metabolite levels were found. It might be speculated that the experiences provided were not strong enough to exert the expected impact on the animals' emotional state. Alternatively, the intensive training procedure necessary for cognitive judgement bias testing might have had a cognitive enrichment effect, potentially countering external influences. While further investigations are required to ascertain the specific causes underlying our findings, the present study adds essential empirical data to the so far scarce amount of studies combining cognitive, behavioural, and physiological measures of emotional state in mice.
Citation
Krakenberg, V., Siestrup, S., Palme, R., Kaiser, S., Sachser, N., & Richter, S. H. (2020). Effects of different social experiences on emotional state in mice. Scientific reports, 10(1), 15255.
DOI
10.1038/s41598-020-71994-9
EWB Constructs:
positive affect
EWB Measures:
touchscreen-based cognitive judgement test, elevated plus mice, dark-light test, open field test
data availability:
Yes
data availability details:
Some additional data is provided within the supplemental information at https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-71994-9#additional-information
brain imaging paradigm:
N/A
brain region/circuit:
Exclusion Criteria:
N/A
Inclusion Criteria
N/A
Non-EWB Behavioral
Measures:
N/A
First author:
Viktoria Krakenberg
species:
mouse
sample size:
24
study design:
case control
longitudinal data?
No
younger controls?
N/A
interventions:
Exposed mice to varying social experiences and assessed affect of social experinece on anxiety-like behavior
study population:
N/A
sex (% female):
0%
ethnicity (%white)
N/A
Age (mean, sd):
9 weeks
biological/Physiological Measures:
(4) endocrine system (corticosterone)