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在公众面前的输赢:观众引导日本鹌鹑的未来成功。

Winning and losing in public: audiences direct future success in Japanese quail.

机构信息

Department of Behavioural Neurobiology, Max-Planck-Institute for Ornithology, Eberhard-Gwinner-Straße Haus 6a, D-82319 Seewiesen, Germany.

出版信息

Horm Behav. 2013 Apr;63(4):625-33. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2013.02.010. Epub 2013 Feb 27.

Abstract

Among vertebrates, winning a fight enhances the probability of future victories and vice versa and the role of post-conflict testosterone in mediating this 'winner effect' is widely accepted. In a series of staged fights of Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) we tested both opponents' pre-fight and post-conflict testosterone, behavior and dominance status after returning to their social groups. We found that the presence of a familiar mixed-sex audience during the encounter modulated both the testosterone response and the long-term success after a fighting experience. 'Public losers' but not 'public winners' lacked a post-conflict testosterone response, whereas without an audience both winners and losers increased testosterone metabolite levels. Long-lasting winner and loser effects exclusively occurred when the performance information was perceived by a mixed-sex audience. In further experiments we manipulated the testosterone responsiveness of either the loser or the winner. An artificial post-conflict testosterone surge after having lost a fight effectively reversed the loser effect in Japanese quail. In contrast, the 'winner effect' was not changed by blocking testosterone after the fight. Overall, male Japanese quails' post-conflict testosterone was connected to the audiences and thus, own or the observers' perception of the challenge rather than to winning or losing a fight.

摘要

在脊椎动物中,赢得一场战斗会增加未来胜利的可能性,反之亦然,而冲突后睾酮在介导这种“胜利者效应”中的作用已被广泛接受。在一系列日本鹌鹑(Coturnix japonica)的模拟战斗中,我们测试了对手在战斗前和冲突后的睾酮、行为以及返回社会群体后的支配地位。我们发现,在遭遇期间,熟悉的混合性别观众的存在会调节睾酮反应和战斗后的长期成功。“公开的失败者”但不是“公开的胜利者”缺乏冲突后的睾酮反应,而没有观众时,胜利者和失败者都会增加睾酮代谢物水平。只有当混合性别观众感知到表现信息时,才会出现持久的胜利者和失败者效应。在进一步的实验中,我们操纵了失败者或胜利者的睾酮反应性。在输掉一场战斗后人为地增加冲突后的睾酮水平,有效地逆转了日本鹌鹑的失败者效应。相比之下,在战斗后阻止睾酮并不会改变“胜利者效应”。总的来说,雄性日本鹌鹑的冲突后睾酮与观众有关,因此与自己或观察者对挑战的感知有关,而与输赢无关。

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