Vertical exploration and dimensional modularity in mice

Exploration is a central component of animal behaviour studied extensively in rodents. Previous tests of free exploration limited vertical movement to rearing and jumping. Here, we attach a wire mesh to the arena wall, allowing vertical exploration. This provides an opportunity to study the morphoge...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yair Wexler, Yoav Benjamini, Ilan Golani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2018-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.180069
id doaj-83c57aa208564b98965c9010255d1e54
record_format Article
spelling doaj-83c57aa208564b98965c9010255d1e542020-11-25T04:06:04ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032018-01-015310.1098/rsos.180069180069Vertical exploration and dimensional modularity in miceYair WexlerYoav BenjaminiIlan GolaniExploration is a central component of animal behaviour studied extensively in rodents. Previous tests of free exploration limited vertical movement to rearing and jumping. Here, we attach a wire mesh to the arena wall, allowing vertical exploration. This provides an opportunity to study the morphogenesis of behaviour along the vertical dimension, and examine the context in which it is performed. In the current set-up, the mice first use the doorway as a point reference for establishing a borderline linear path along the circumference of the arena floor, and then use this path as a linear reference for performing horizontal forays towards the centre (incursions) and vertical forays on the wire mesh (ascents). Vertical movement starts with rearing on the wall, and commences with straight vertical ascents that increase in extent and complexity. The mice first reach the top of the wall, then mill about within circumscribed horizontal sections, and then progress horizontally for increasingly longer distances on the upper edge of the wire mesh. Examination of the sequence of borderline segments, incursions and ascents reveals dimensional modularity: an initial series (bout) of borderline segments precedes alternating bouts of incursions and bouts of ascents, thus exhibiting sustained attention to each dimension separately. The exhibited separate growth in extent and in complexity of movement and the sustained attention to each of the three dimensions disclose the mice's modular perception of this environment and validate all three as natural kinds.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.180069verticalrearingclimbingexplorationmicemodularity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yair Wexler
Yoav Benjamini
Ilan Golani
spellingShingle Yair Wexler
Yoav Benjamini
Ilan Golani
Vertical exploration and dimensional modularity in mice
Royal Society Open Science
vertical
rearing
climbing
exploration
mice
modularity
author_facet Yair Wexler
Yoav Benjamini
Ilan Golani
author_sort Yair Wexler
title Vertical exploration and dimensional modularity in mice
title_short Vertical exploration and dimensional modularity in mice
title_full Vertical exploration and dimensional modularity in mice
title_fullStr Vertical exploration and dimensional modularity in mice
title_full_unstemmed Vertical exploration and dimensional modularity in mice
title_sort vertical exploration and dimensional modularity in mice
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Exploration is a central component of animal behaviour studied extensively in rodents. Previous tests of free exploration limited vertical movement to rearing and jumping. Here, we attach a wire mesh to the arena wall, allowing vertical exploration. This provides an opportunity to study the morphogenesis of behaviour along the vertical dimension, and examine the context in which it is performed. In the current set-up, the mice first use the doorway as a point reference for establishing a borderline linear path along the circumference of the arena floor, and then use this path as a linear reference for performing horizontal forays towards the centre (incursions) and vertical forays on the wire mesh (ascents). Vertical movement starts with rearing on the wall, and commences with straight vertical ascents that increase in extent and complexity. The mice first reach the top of the wall, then mill about within circumscribed horizontal sections, and then progress horizontally for increasingly longer distances on the upper edge of the wire mesh. Examination of the sequence of borderline segments, incursions and ascents reveals dimensional modularity: an initial series (bout) of borderline segments precedes alternating bouts of incursions and bouts of ascents, thus exhibiting sustained attention to each dimension separately. The exhibited separate growth in extent and in complexity of movement and the sustained attention to each of the three dimensions disclose the mice's modular perception of this environment and validate all three as natural kinds.
topic vertical
rearing
climbing
exploration
mice
modularity
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.180069
work_keys_str_mv AT yairwexler verticalexplorationanddimensionalmodularityinmice
AT yoavbenjamini verticalexplorationanddimensionalmodularityinmice
AT ilangolani verticalexplorationanddimensionalmodularityinmice
_version_ 1724432575334711296