Social transmission of Pavlovian fear: fear-conditioning by-proxy in related female rats

被引:0
作者
Carolyn E. Jones
Penny D. Riha
Andrea C. Gore
Marie-H Monfils
机构
[1] The University of Texas at Austin,Department of Psychology, Center for Learning and Memory
[2] The University of Texas at Austin,Division of Pharmacology and Toxicology, College of Pharmacy
[3] The University of Texas at Austin,Center for Learning and Memory
来源
Animal Cognition | 2014年 / 17卷
关键词
Social transmission; Fear-conditioning; Observational learning; Indirect conditioning;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Pairing a previously neutral conditioned stimulus (CS; e.g., a tone) to an aversive unconditioned stimulus (US; e.g., a foot-shock) leads to associative learning such that the tone alone will elicit a conditioned response (e.g., freezing). Individuals can also acquire fear from a social context, such as through observing the fear expression of a conspecific. In the current study, we examined the influence of kinship/familiarity on social transmission of fear in female rats. Rats were housed in triads with either sisters or non-related females. One rat from each cage was fear conditioned to a tone CS+ shock US. On day two, the conditioned rat was returned to the chamber accompanied by one of her cage mates. Both rats were allowed to behave freely, while the tone was played in the absence of the foot-shock. The previously untrained rat is referred to as the fear-conditioned by-proxy (FCbP) animal, as she would freeze based on observations of her cage-mate’s response rather than due to direct personal experience with the foot-shock. The third rat served as a cage-mate control. The third day, long-term memory tests to the CS were performed. Consistent with our previous application of this paradigm in male rats (Bruchey et al. in Behav Brain Res 214(1):80–84, 2010), our results revealed that social interactions between the fear conditioned and FCbP rats on day two contribute to freezing displayed by the FCbP rats on day three. In this experiment, prosocial behavior occurring at the termination of the cue on day two was significantly greater between sisters than their non-sister counterparts, and this behavior resulted in increased freezing on day three. Our results suggest that familiarity and/or kinship influences the social transmission of fear in female rats.
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收藏
页码:827 / 834
页数:7
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