Social housing improves dairy calves' performance in two cognitive tests.

Early social housing is known to benefit cognitive development in laboratory animals. Pre-weaned dairy calves are typically separated from their dam immediately after birth and housed alone, but no work to date has addressed the effect of individual housing on cognitive performance of these animals....

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Main Authors: Charlotte Gaillard, Rebecca K Meagher, Marina A G von Keyserlingk, Daniel M Weary
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3935992?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d7c2b14237ec4b4abb1f56f6a2b0b5242020-11-25T01:12:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0192e9020510.1371/journal.pone.0090205Social housing improves dairy calves' performance in two cognitive tests.Charlotte GaillardRebecca K MeagherMarina A G von KeyserlingkDaniel M WearyEarly social housing is known to benefit cognitive development in laboratory animals. Pre-weaned dairy calves are typically separated from their dam immediately after birth and housed alone, but no work to date has addressed the effect of individual housing on cognitive performance of these animals. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of individual versus social housing on two measures of cognitive performance: reversal learning and novel object recognition. Holstein calves were either housed individually in a standard calf pen (n = 8) or kept in pairs using a double pen (n = 10). Calves were tested twice daily in a Y-maze starting at 3 weeks of age. Calves were initially trained to discriminate two colours (black and white) until they reached a learning criterion of 80% correct over three consecutive sessions. Training stimuli were then reversed (i.e. the previously rewarded colour was now unrewarded, and vice-versa). Calves from the two treatments showed similar rates of learning in the initial discrimination task, but the individually housed calves showed poorer performance in the reversal task. At 7 weeks of age, calves were tested for their response to a novel object in eight tests over a two-day period. Pair-housed calves showed declining exploration with repeated testing but individually reared calves did not. The results of these experiments provide the first direct evidence that individual housing impairs cognitive performance in dairy calves.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3935992?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charlotte Gaillard
Rebecca K Meagher
Marina A G von Keyserlingk
Daniel M Weary
spellingShingle Charlotte Gaillard
Rebecca K Meagher
Marina A G von Keyserlingk
Daniel M Weary
Social housing improves dairy calves' performance in two cognitive tests.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Charlotte Gaillard
Rebecca K Meagher
Marina A G von Keyserlingk
Daniel M Weary
author_sort Charlotte Gaillard
title Social housing improves dairy calves' performance in two cognitive tests.
title_short Social housing improves dairy calves' performance in two cognitive tests.
title_full Social housing improves dairy calves' performance in two cognitive tests.
title_fullStr Social housing improves dairy calves' performance in two cognitive tests.
title_full_unstemmed Social housing improves dairy calves' performance in two cognitive tests.
title_sort social housing improves dairy calves' performance in two cognitive tests.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Early social housing is known to benefit cognitive development in laboratory animals. Pre-weaned dairy calves are typically separated from their dam immediately after birth and housed alone, but no work to date has addressed the effect of individual housing on cognitive performance of these animals. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of individual versus social housing on two measures of cognitive performance: reversal learning and novel object recognition. Holstein calves were either housed individually in a standard calf pen (n = 8) or kept in pairs using a double pen (n = 10). Calves were tested twice daily in a Y-maze starting at 3 weeks of age. Calves were initially trained to discriminate two colours (black and white) until they reached a learning criterion of 80% correct over three consecutive sessions. Training stimuli were then reversed (i.e. the previously rewarded colour was now unrewarded, and vice-versa). Calves from the two treatments showed similar rates of learning in the initial discrimination task, but the individually housed calves showed poorer performance in the reversal task. At 7 weeks of age, calves were tested for their response to a novel object in eight tests over a two-day period. Pair-housed calves showed declining exploration with repeated testing but individually reared calves did not. The results of these experiments provide the first direct evidence that individual housing impairs cognitive performance in dairy calves.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3935992?pdf=render
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