Beery Annaliese K, Christensen Jennifer D, Lee Nicole S, Blandino Katrina L
Department of Psychology and Biology, Program in Neuroscience, Smith College, Northampton, MA, United States.
Neuroscience and Behavior Graduate Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, United States.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2018 Mar 19;12:50. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00050. eCollection 2018.
Social behavior is often described as a unified concept, but highly social (group-living) species exhibit distinct social structures and may make different social decisions. Prairie voles () are socially monogamous rodents that often reside in extended family groups, and exhibit robust preferences for social partners (same- and opposite-sex) during extended choice tests, although short-term preferences are not known. Mice () are gregarious and colonial, but in brief laboratory tests of social preference they typically prefer social novelty. This preference for novel vs. familiar peers may represent a species-specific difference in social decision-making between mice and prairie voles. However, the tests used to measure preferences in each species differ markedly in duration and degree of contact, such that the behaviors cannot be directly compared. We assessed whether social preferences for novelty or familiarity differed between mice and prairie voles of both sexes when assessed with matching protocols: the sociability/social preference test (SPT) typically used in mice (short, no direct contact), and the partner preference test (PPT) used in voles (long, direct contact). A subset of voles also underwent a PPT using barriers (long, no direct contact). In the short SPT, behavior did not differ between species. In the longer test, pronounced partner preferences emerged in prairie voles, but mice exhibited no social preferences and rarely huddled. No sex differences were evident in either test. Direct physical contact was required for partner preferences in huddling time in voles, but preference for the partner chamber was evident with or without contact. Both prairie voles and mice are social, but they exhibit important differences in the specificity and extent of their social behavior. While mice are often used to study social approach and other behaviors, voles are a more suitable species for the study of selective social relationships. Consideration of these differences will be important for studies examining the neural mechanisms supporting different kinds of peer social behavior.
社会行为通常被描述为一个统一的概念,但高度社会化(群居)的物种表现出不同的社会结构,并且可能做出不同的社会决策。草原田鼠是实行社会一夫一妻制的啮齿动物,它们经常生活在大家庭群体中,并且在长时间的选择测试中对社会伙伴(同性和异性)表现出强烈的偏好,不过短期偏好尚不清楚。小鼠是群居和集群生活的,但在简短的社会偏好实验室测试中,它们通常更喜欢新奇的社会环境。这种对新奇与熟悉同伴的偏好可能代表了小鼠和草原田鼠在社会决策方面的物种特异性差异。然而,用于测量每个物种偏好的测试在持续时间和接触程度上有显著差异,因此这些行为无法直接比较。我们使用匹配的实验方案评估了雄性和雌性小鼠与草原田鼠在对新奇或熟悉的社会环境的偏好上是否存在差异:小鼠通常使用的社交性/社会偏好测试(SPT,时间短,无直接接触),以及田鼠使用的伴侣偏好测试(PPT,时间长,有直接接触)。一部分田鼠还进行了使用屏障的PPT(时间长,无直接接触)。在简短的SPT中,不同物种之间的行为没有差异。在较长时间的测试中,草原田鼠出现了明显的伴侣偏好,但小鼠没有表现出社会偏好,也很少挤在一起。在这两种测试中均未发现明显的性别差异。田鼠挤在一起的时间上的伴侣偏好需要直接身体接触,但无论有无接触,对伴侣区域的偏好都很明显。草原田鼠和小鼠都是社会性动物,但它们在社会行为的特异性和程度上表现出重要差异。虽然小鼠经常被用于研究社会接近和其他行为,但田鼠更适合用于研究选择性社会关系。考虑这些差异对于研究支持不同类型同伴社会行为的神经机制很重要。