Studies of Sociosexual Interactions in Rats in an Externally Valid Procedure: Are They Relevant for Understanding Human Sexual Behavior?

When a prolonged observation of groups of rats in a seminatural environment is used as testing procedure, different behavioral patterns are shown compared with what observed in a pair housed in a small cage. Males and females copulate simultaneously, they show a promiscuously and random copulatory p...

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Main Authors: Xi Chu, Anders Ågmo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de San Buenaventura 2016-09-01
Series:International Journal of Psychological Research
Subjects:
rat
Online Access:http://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/2339
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spelling doaj-30bdc8f744d14b4e8b578d3e1dcad5c72020-11-24T22:33:25ZengUniversidad de San BuenaventuraInternational Journal of Psychological Research2011-20842011-79222016-09-0192769510.21500/20112084.2339Studies of Sociosexual Interactions in Rats in an Externally Valid Procedure: Are They Relevant for Understanding Human Sexual Behavior?Xi Chu0Anders Ågmo1 University of Tromsø University of TromsøWhen a prolonged observation of groups of rats in a seminatural environment is used as testing procedure, different behavioral patterns are shown compared with what observed in a pair housed in a small cage. Males and females copulate simultaneously, they show a promiscuously and random copulatory pattern. Females remain completely receptive from the first lordosis displayed in the period of behavioral estrus until the last. There is no reduction in paracopulatory behaviors and no increase in rejections towards the end of estrus. Female paracopulatory behavior and receptivity change in a most abrupt way at both initiation and termination of behavioral estrus. It appears that, in the seminatural environment, males copulate in bouts, and males do not pursue the females unless they are fully receptive. Non-sexual, social behavior including affiliative and nonaffiliative interaction among rats is rather unrelated to sexual activities in both sex.http://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/2339representative designseminatural environmentsexual behaviorsocial behaviorrat
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Xi Chu
Anders Ågmo
spellingShingle Xi Chu
Anders Ågmo
Studies of Sociosexual Interactions in Rats in an Externally Valid Procedure: Are They Relevant for Understanding Human Sexual Behavior?
International Journal of Psychological Research
representative design
seminatural environment
sexual behavior
social behavior
rat
author_facet Xi Chu
Anders Ågmo
author_sort Xi Chu
title Studies of Sociosexual Interactions in Rats in an Externally Valid Procedure: Are They Relevant for Understanding Human Sexual Behavior?
title_short Studies of Sociosexual Interactions in Rats in an Externally Valid Procedure: Are They Relevant for Understanding Human Sexual Behavior?
title_full Studies of Sociosexual Interactions in Rats in an Externally Valid Procedure: Are They Relevant for Understanding Human Sexual Behavior?
title_fullStr Studies of Sociosexual Interactions in Rats in an Externally Valid Procedure: Are They Relevant for Understanding Human Sexual Behavior?
title_full_unstemmed Studies of Sociosexual Interactions in Rats in an Externally Valid Procedure: Are They Relevant for Understanding Human Sexual Behavior?
title_sort studies of sociosexual interactions in rats in an externally valid procedure: are they relevant for understanding human sexual behavior?
publisher Universidad de San Buenaventura
series International Journal of Psychological Research
issn 2011-2084
2011-7922
publishDate 2016-09-01
description When a prolonged observation of groups of rats in a seminatural environment is used as testing procedure, different behavioral patterns are shown compared with what observed in a pair housed in a small cage. Males and females copulate simultaneously, they show a promiscuously and random copulatory pattern. Females remain completely receptive from the first lordosis displayed in the period of behavioral estrus until the last. There is no reduction in paracopulatory behaviors and no increase in rejections towards the end of estrus. Female paracopulatory behavior and receptivity change in a most abrupt way at both initiation and termination of behavioral estrus. It appears that, in the seminatural environment, males copulate in bouts, and males do not pursue the females unless they are fully receptive. Non-sexual, social behavior including affiliative and nonaffiliative interaction among rats is rather unrelated to sexual activities in both sex.
topic representative design
seminatural environment
sexual behavior
social behavior
rat
url http://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/2339
work_keys_str_mv AT xichu studiesofsociosexualinteractionsinratsinanexternallyvalidprocedurearetheyrelevantforunderstandinghumansexualbehavior
AT andersagmo studiesofsociosexualinteractionsinratsinanexternallyvalidprocedurearetheyrelevantforunderstandinghumansexualbehavior
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