Lidhar Navdeep K, Insel Nathan, Dong June Yue, Takehara-Nishiuchi Kaori
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, 100 St. George Street, 4th Floor Sidney Smith Hall, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada.
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, 100 St. George Street, 4th Floor Sidney Smith Hall, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada; Department of Psychology, University of Montana, Skaggs Building Room 143, 32 Campus Dr. Missoula, MT 59812-1584, USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2017 Aug 14;332:362-371. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2017.06.011. Epub 2017 Jun 13.
Some animals learn to fear a situation after observing another individual come to harm, and this learning is influenced by the animals' social relationship and history. An important but sometimes overlooked factor in studies of observational fear learning is that social context not only affects observers, but may also influence the behavior and communications expressed by those being observed. Here we sought to investigate whether observational fear learning in the degu (Octodon degus) is affected by social familiarity, and the degree to which vocal expressions of alarm or distress contribute. 'Demonstrator' degus underwent contextual fear conditioning in the presence of a cagemate or stranger observer. Among the 15 male pairs, observers of familiar demonstrators exhibited higher freezing rates than observers of strangers when returned to the conditioning environment one day later. Observer freezing during testing was, however, also related to the proportion of short- versus long- inter-call-intervals (ICIs) in vocalizations recorded during prior conditioning. In a regression model that included both social relationship and ICI patterns, only the latter was significant. Further investigation of vocalizations, including use of a novel, directed k-means clustering approach, suggested that temporal structure rather than tonal variations may have been responsible for communicating danger. These data offer insight into how different expressions of distress or fear may impact an observer, adding to the complexity of social context effects in studies of empathy and social cognition. The experiments also offer new data on degu alarm calls and a potentially novel methodological approach to complex vocalizations.
一些动物在观察到另一个体受到伤害后会学会害怕某种情境,并且这种学习会受到动物的社会关系和经历的影响。在观察性恐惧学习研究中,一个重要但有时被忽视的因素是社会环境不仅会影响观察者,还可能影响被观察者所表现出的行为和交流方式。在此,我们试图研究社交熟悉度是否会影响八齿鼠(Octodon degus)的观察性恐惧学习,以及警报或痛苦的声音表达在其中所起作用的程度。“示范者”八齿鼠在同笼伙伴或陌生观察者在场的情况下接受情境恐惧条件反射训练。在15对雄性八齿鼠中,熟悉示范者的观察者在一天后回到训练环境时,比陌生示范者的观察者表现出更高的僵住率。然而,测试期间观察者的僵住行为也与先前训练期间记录的发声中短间隔与长间隔(ICI)的比例有关。在一个同时包含社会关系和ICI模式的回归模型中,只有后者具有显著性。对发声的进一步研究,包括使用一种新颖的、定向的k均值聚类方法,表明时间结构而非音调变化可能是传达危险的原因。这些数据为不同的痛苦或恐惧表达如何影响观察者提供了见解,增加了共情和社会认知研究中社会环境效应的复杂性。这些实验还提供了关于八齿鼠警报叫声的新数据以及一种针对复杂发声的潜在新颖方法。