Petrulis Aras, Weidner Molly, Johnston Robert E
Department of Psychology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Physiol Behav. 2004 Jun;81(4):629-38. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2004.03.001.
Golden hamsters, like many animals, form dominant/subordinate relationships after aggressive encounters. We examined whether behavioral responses by males that won or lost fights would differ toward familiar and unfamiliar male stimulus animals. In Experiment 1, male winners or losers of fights explored an arena containing a confined stimulus animal that was either familiar or novel and had either won or lost a fight. Compared to dominant males, losers spent less time in proximity to stimulus males and investigated them less. Losers also displayed higher levels of stretch-attend postures (indicative of risk assessment) than winners, and they showed more escape and locomotion in response to familiar winners than to unfamiliar winners, indicating recognition of the male that they had lost to. In Experiment 2, losers scent marked less to the odors of a familiar winner than to those of an unfamiliar winner. Thus, male hamsters appear to use familiarity with a former opponent's odors to adaptively regulate their responses to variations in social threat.
与许多动物一样,金黄地鼠在经历争斗后会形成支配/从属关系。我们研究了在打斗中获胜或失败的雄性对熟悉和陌生雄性刺激动物的行为反应是否会有所不同。在实验1中,打斗的雄性胜者或败者在一个竞技场中探索,竞技场里有一只被限制活动的刺激动物,这只动物要么是熟悉的,要么是陌生的,并且要么赢过一场打斗,要么输过一场打斗。与占主导地位的雄性相比,败者在靠近刺激雄性的时间上更短,对它们的探究也更少。败者还比胜者表现出更高水平的伸展关注姿势(表明进行了风险评估),并且它们对熟悉的胜者比陌生的胜者表现出更多的逃避和移动,这表明它们认出了自己输给的雄性。在实验2中,败者对熟悉胜者气味的气味标记比对陌生胜者气味的气味标记要少。因此,雄性仓鼠似乎利用对前对手气味的熟悉程度来适应性地调节它们对社会威胁变化的反应。