A mouse's spontaneous eating repertoire aids performance on laboratory skilled reaching tasks: A motoric example of instinctual drift with an ethological description of the withdraw movements in freely-moving and head-fixed mice

被引:9
作者
Whishaw, Ian Q. [1 ]
Faraji, Jamshid [1 ,2 ]
Agha, Behroo Mirza [1 ]
Kuntz, Jessica R. [1 ]
Metz, Gerlinde A. S. [1 ]
Mohajerani, Majid H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Lethbridge, Dept Neurosci, Canadian Ctr Behav Neurosci, Lethbridge, AB T1K 3M4, Canada
[2] Golestan Univ Med Sci, Fac Nursing & Midwifery, Gorgan, Iran
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会; 加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
Comparisons of free-moving and head-fixed reaching; Head-fixed reaching tasks for the mouse; Instinctual drift in mouse laboratory tasks; Mouse skilled reaching; Order-common eating movements in the mouse; RATS RATTUS-NORVEGICUS; FORELIMB MOVEMENTS; INTRACORTICAL MICROSTIMULATION; PARIETAL CORTEX; FRONTAL-CORTEX; MUS-MUSCULUS; ORGANIZATION; STROKE; GRASP; BRAIN;
D O I
10.1016/j.bbr.2017.09.044
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Rodents display a spontaneous "order-common" pattern of food eating: they pick up food using the mouth, sit on their haunches, and transfer the food to the hands for handling/chewing. The present study examines how this pattern of behaviour influences performance on "skilled-reaching" tasks, in which mice purchase food with a single hand. Here five types of withdraw movement, the retraction of the hand, in three reaching tasks: freely moving single-pellet, head-fixed single-pellet, and head-fixed pasta-eating is described. The withdraw movement varied depending upon whether a reach was anticipatory, no food present, or was unsuccessful or successful with food present. Ease of withdraw is dependent upon the extent to which animals used order-common movements. For freely-moving mice, a hand-to-mouth movement was assisted by a mouth-to-hand movement and food transfer to the mouth depended upon a sitting posture and using the other hand to assist food holding, both order-common movements. In the head-fixed single-pellet task, with postural and head movements prevented, withdraw was made with difficulty and tongue protrude movements assisted food transfer to the mouth once the hand reached the mouth. Only when a head-fixed mouse made a bilateral hand-to-mouth movement, a component of order-common eating, was the withdraw movement made with ease. The results are discussed with respect to the use of order-common movements in skilled-reaching tasks and with respect to the optimal design of tasks used to assess rodent skilled hand movement.
引用
收藏
页码:80 / 90
页数:11
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