Social vs. Nonsocial Housing Differentially Affects Perseverative Behavior in Rats (Ratus norvegicus)

Perseverance, also commonly referred to as grit or industriousness, is the continued effort exerted to complete goal-directed tasks. Many factors, such as stress, can contribute to perseverative behavior, but the role of sociality on perseverance in animal models has not been studied. In this experi...

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Main Authors: Brittany M. Hemmer, Audrey E. Parrish, Taylor B. Wise, Marc Davis, Margaret Branham, Dominique E. Martin, Victoria L. Templer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Animal Behavior and Cognition 2019-08-01
Series:Animal Behavior and Cognition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/article.php?id=1176
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spelling doaj-1732d5e753bb441a9332779565ce16942020-11-25T01:44:05ZengAnimal Behavior and CognitionAnimal Behavior and Cognition2372-50522372-43232019-08-016316817810.26451/abc.06.03.02.2019Social vs. Nonsocial Housing Differentially Affects Perseverative Behavior in Rats (Ratus norvegicus)Brittany M. Hemmer Audrey E. Parrish Taylor B. WiseMarc Davis Margaret Branham Dominique E. Martin Victoria L. Templer Perseverance, also commonly referred to as grit or industriousness, is the continued effort exerted to complete goal-directed tasks. Many factors, such as stress, can contribute to perseverative behavior, but the role of sociality on perseverance in animal models has not been studied. In this experiment, perseverance was measured in Long-Evans rats; half of which were socially housed (SH) and the other half were nonsocially housed (NSH). Rats were placed in a continuous T-maze; one arm of the maze contained an unobstructed low value reward and the other arm contained a high value reward blocked by a barrier that progressively increased in height across testing sessions. We will hereon refer to the low value reward and high value reward as the low reward and the high reward, respectively. Perseverative behavior was assessed by time spent interacting with the barrier and trials were characterized as either adaptive perseverative trials (high reward obtainment) and maladaptive perseverative trials (low reward obtainment after abandoning attempts to overcome the high reward barrier). SH and NSH rats were equally proficient at overcoming a physical barrier to obtain a higher-valued reward, but the NSH rats spent more time interacting with the barriers during maladaptive perseverative trials than SH rats. NSH rats thus exhibited prolonged efforts to overcome the barrier only to ultimately travel to the low reward option. In contrast, SH rats selected the low reward option earlier in the trial and did not maladaptively perseverate without obtaining the high reward. Putative evidence for increased perseverance in NSH rats is explained in the context of maladaptive perseverative behavior rather than perseverance per se. Increased adaptability and acquisition of task-set in SH rats suggests a role of social housing in advantageous decision making.http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/article.php?id=1176PerseveranceEnrichmentRatsIndustriousnessGritAcquisition. Social HousingAcquistionSocial Housing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brittany M. Hemmer
Audrey E. Parrish
Taylor B. Wise
Marc Davis
Margaret Branham
Dominique E. Martin
Victoria L. Templer
spellingShingle Brittany M. Hemmer
Audrey E. Parrish
Taylor B. Wise
Marc Davis
Margaret Branham
Dominique E. Martin
Victoria L. Templer
Social vs. Nonsocial Housing Differentially Affects Perseverative Behavior in Rats (Ratus norvegicus)
Animal Behavior and Cognition
Perseverance
Enrichment
Rats
Industriousness
Grit
Acquisition. Social Housing
Acquistion
Social Housing
author_facet Brittany M. Hemmer
Audrey E. Parrish
Taylor B. Wise
Marc Davis
Margaret Branham
Dominique E. Martin
Victoria L. Templer
author_sort Brittany M. Hemmer
title Social vs. Nonsocial Housing Differentially Affects Perseverative Behavior in Rats (Ratus norvegicus)
title_short Social vs. Nonsocial Housing Differentially Affects Perseverative Behavior in Rats (Ratus norvegicus)
title_full Social vs. Nonsocial Housing Differentially Affects Perseverative Behavior in Rats (Ratus norvegicus)
title_fullStr Social vs. Nonsocial Housing Differentially Affects Perseverative Behavior in Rats (Ratus norvegicus)
title_full_unstemmed Social vs. Nonsocial Housing Differentially Affects Perseverative Behavior in Rats (Ratus norvegicus)
title_sort social vs. nonsocial housing differentially affects perseverative behavior in rats (ratus norvegicus)
publisher Animal Behavior and Cognition
series Animal Behavior and Cognition
issn 2372-5052
2372-4323
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Perseverance, also commonly referred to as grit or industriousness, is the continued effort exerted to complete goal-directed tasks. Many factors, such as stress, can contribute to perseverative behavior, but the role of sociality on perseverance in animal models has not been studied. In this experiment, perseverance was measured in Long-Evans rats; half of which were socially housed (SH) and the other half were nonsocially housed (NSH). Rats were placed in a continuous T-maze; one arm of the maze contained an unobstructed low value reward and the other arm contained a high value reward blocked by a barrier that progressively increased in height across testing sessions. We will hereon refer to the low value reward and high value reward as the low reward and the high reward, respectively. Perseverative behavior was assessed by time spent interacting with the barrier and trials were characterized as either adaptive perseverative trials (high reward obtainment) and maladaptive perseverative trials (low reward obtainment after abandoning attempts to overcome the high reward barrier). SH and NSH rats were equally proficient at overcoming a physical barrier to obtain a higher-valued reward, but the NSH rats spent more time interacting with the barriers during maladaptive perseverative trials than SH rats. NSH rats thus exhibited prolonged efforts to overcome the barrier only to ultimately travel to the low reward option. In contrast, SH rats selected the low reward option earlier in the trial and did not maladaptively perseverate without obtaining the high reward. Putative evidence for increased perseverance in NSH rats is explained in the context of maladaptive perseverative behavior rather than perseverance per se. Increased adaptability and acquisition of task-set in SH rats suggests a role of social housing in advantageous decision making.
topic Perseverance
Enrichment
Rats
Industriousness
Grit
Acquisition. Social Housing
Acquistion
Social Housing
url http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/article.php?id=1176
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