Whishaw Ian Q, Faraji Jamshid, Mirza Agha Behroo, Kuntz Jessica R, Metz Gerlinde A S, Mohajerani Majid H
Department of Neuroscience, Canadian Centre for Behavioural Neuroscience, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, AB, T1K 3M4, Canada.
Department of Neuroscience, Canadian Centre for Behavioural Neuroscience, University of Lethbridge, Lethbridge, AB, T1K 3M4, Canada; Golestan University of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Nursing & Midwifery, Gorgan, Islamic Republic of Iran.
Behav Brain Res. 2018 Jan 30;337:80-90. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2017.09.044. Epub 2017 Sep 28.
Rodents display a spontaneous "order-common" pattern of food eating: they pick up food using the mouth, sit on their haunches, and transfer the food to the hands for handling/chewing. The present study examines how this pattern of behaviour influences performance on "skilled-reaching" tasks, in which mice purchase food with a single hand. Here five types of withdraw movement, the retraction of the hand, in three reaching tasks: freely-moving single-pellet, head-fixed single-pellet, and head-fixed pasta-eating is described. The withdraw movement varied depending upon whether a reach was anticipatory, no food present, or was unsuccessful or successful with food present. Ease of withdraw is dependent upon the extent to which animals used order-common movements. For freely-moving mice, a hand-to-mouth movement was assisted by a mouth-to-hand movement and food transfer to the mouth depended upon a sitting posture and using the other hand to assist food holding, both order-common movements. In the head-fixed single-pellet task, with postural and head movements prevented, withdraw was made with difficulty and tongue protrude movements assisted food transfer to the mouth once the hand reached the mouth. Only when a head-fixed mouse made a bilateral hand-to-mouth movement, a component of order-common eating, was the withdraw movement made with ease. The results are discussed with respect to the use of order-common movements in skilled-reaching tasks and with respect to the optimal design of tasks used to assess rodent skilled hand movement.
啮齿动物呈现出一种自发的“有序-常见”进食模式:它们用嘴捡起食物,蹲坐下来,然后将食物转移到手中以便处理/咀嚼。本研究考察了这种行为模式如何影响“熟练抓取”任务的表现,在这些任务中,小鼠用单只手获取食物。这里描述了在三种抓取任务中的五种撤回动作,即手的回缩:自由活动单颗粒食物任务、头部固定单颗粒食物任务和头部固定吃意大利面任务。撤回动作因抓取是预期的、没有食物、不成功还是成功且有食物而有所不同。撤回的难易程度取决于动物使用有序-常见动作的程度。对于自由活动的小鼠,手到嘴的动作由嘴到手的动作辅助,食物转移到嘴取决于坐姿并使用另一只手辅助握持食物,这两个都是有序-常见动作。在头部固定单颗粒食物任务中,由于姿势和头部动作受到限制,撤回动作困难,一旦手到达嘴部,舌头伸出动作辅助食物转移到嘴。只有当头部固定的小鼠进行双侧手到嘴的动作(一种有序-常见进食的组成部分)时,撤回动作才轻松。就熟练抓取任务中有序-常见动作的使用以及用于评估啮齿动物熟练手部动作的任务的最佳设计对结果进行了讨论。