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Experience Modulates Vicarious Freezing in Rats: A Model for Empathy
被引:137
作者:
Atsak, Piray
[1
]
Orre, Marie
[1
,2
]
Bakker, Petra
[1
]
Cerliani, Leonardo
[1
,2
]
Roozendaal, Benno
[1
]
Gazzola, Valeria
[1
,2
]
Moita, Marta
[3
]
Keysers, Christian
[1
,2
]
机构:
[1] Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Dept Neurosci, NL-9713 AV Groningen, Netherlands
[2] Netherlands Inst Neurosci, Amsterdam, Netherlands
[3] Inst Gulbenkian Ciencias, Champalimaud Neurosci Programme, Oeiras, Portugal
来源:
PLOS ONE
|
2011年
/
6卷
/
07期
关键词:
SEX-DIFFERENCES;
ACTION REPRESENTATION;
SOCIAL TRANSMISSION;
ULTRASONIC CALLS;
MIRROR NEURONS;
ESTROUS-CYCLE;
FEMALE RATS;
PAIN;
FEAR;
RESPONSES;
D O I:
10.1371/journal.pone.0021855
中图分类号:
O [数理科学和化学];
P [天文学、地球科学];
Q [生物科学];
N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号:
07 ;
0710 ;
09 ;
摘要:
The study of the neural basis of emotional empathy has received a surge of interest in recent years but mostly employing human neuroimaging. A simpler animal model would pave the way for systematic single cell recordings and invasive manipulations of the brain regions implicated in empathy. Recent evidence has been put forward for the existence of empathy in rodents. In this study, we describe a potential model of empathy in female rats, in which we studied interactions between two rats: a witness observes a demonstrator experiencing a series of footshocks. By comparing the reaction of witnesses with or without previous footshock experience, we examine the role of prior experience as a modulator of empathy. We show that witnesses having previously experienced footshocks, but not naive ones, display vicarious freezing behavior upon witnessing a cage-mate experiencing footshocks. Strikingly, the demonstrator's behavior was in turn modulated by the behavior of the witness: demonstrators froze more following footshocks if their witness froze more. Previous experiments have shown that rats emit ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) when receiving footshocks. Thus, the role of USV in triggering vicarious freezing in our paradigm is examined. We found that experienced witness-demonstrator pairs emitted more USVs than naive witness-demonstrator pairs, but the number of USVs was correlated with freezing in demonstrators, not in witnesses. Furthermore, playing back the USVs, recorded from witness-demonstrator pairs during the empathy test, did not induce vicarious freezing behavior in experienced witnesses. Thus, our findings confirm that vicarious freezing can be triggered in rats, and moreover it can be modulated by prior experience. Additionally, our result suggests that vicarious freezing is not triggered by USVs per se and it influences back onto the behavior of the demonstrator that had elicited the vicarious freezing in witnesses, introducing a paradigm to study empathy as a social loop.
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