Department of Neuroscience, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2011;6(7):e21855. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0021855. Epub 2011 Jul 13.
The study of the neural basis of emotional empathy has received a surge of interest in recent years but mostly employing human neuroimaging. A simpler animal model would pave the way for systematic single cell recordings and invasive manipulations of the brain regions implicated in empathy. Recent evidence has been put forward for the existence of empathy in rodents. In this study, we describe a potential model of empathy in female rats, in which we studied interactions between two rats: a witness observes a demonstrator experiencing a series of footshocks. By comparing the reaction of witnesses with or without previous footshock experience, we examine the role of prior experience as a modulator of empathy. We show that witnesses having previously experienced footshocks, but not naïve ones, display vicarious freezing behavior upon witnessing a cage-mate experiencing footshocks. Strikingly, the demonstrator's behavior was in turn modulated by the behavior of the witness: demonstrators froze more following footshocks if their witness froze more. Previous experiments have shown that rats emit ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) when receiving footshocks. Thus, the role of USV in triggering vicarious freezing in our paradigm is examined. We found that experienced witness-demonstrator pairs emitted more USVs than naïve witness-demonstrator pairs, but the number of USVs was correlated with freezing in demonstrators, not in witnesses. Furthermore, playing back the USVs, recorded from witness-demonstrator pairs during the empathy test, did not induce vicarious freezing behavior in experienced witnesses. Thus, our findings confirm that vicarious freezing can be triggered in rats, and moreover it can be modulated by prior experience. Additionally, our result suggests that vicarious freezing is not triggered by USVs per se and it influences back onto the behavior of the demonstrator that had elicited the vicarious freezing in witnesses, introducing a paradigm to study empathy as a social loop.
近年来,情感共情的神经基础研究受到了极大的关注,但大多采用人类神经影像学。一个更简单的动物模型将为系统的单细胞记录和对共情相关脑区的侵入性操作铺平道路。最近有证据表明啮齿动物存在共情。在这项研究中,我们描述了一种雌性大鼠共情的潜在模型,在该模型中,我们研究了两只大鼠之间的相互作用:一个见证者观察一个示范者经历一系列电击。通过比较有或没有先前电击经验的见证者的反应,我们研究了先前经验作为共情调节剂的作用。我们发现,先前经历过电击的见证者,而不是未经训练的见证者,在目睹笼中的同伴受到电击时会表现出替代性冻结行为。引人注目的是,示范者的行为反过来又受到见证者行为的调节:如果见证者冻结得更多,示范者在受到电击后会冻结得更多。先前的实验表明,大鼠在受到电击时会发出超声波叫声(USVs)。因此,我们检查了 USV 在我们的范式中引发替代性冻结的作用。我们发现,有经验的见证者-示范者对发出的 USVs 比未经训练的见证者-示范者对多,但 USVs 的数量与示范者的冻结有关,而与见证者的冻结无关。此外,播放从共情测试期间见证者-示范者对记录的 USVs,并没有在有经验的见证者中引发替代性冻结行为。因此,我们的发现证实了替代性冻结可以在大鼠中引发,并且可以通过先前的经验进行调节。此外,我们的结果表明,替代性冻结不是由 USVs 本身引发的,它会对引发见证者替代性冻结的示范者的行为产生影响,引入了一种研究共情作为社会循环的范式。