School of Physiology, Pharmacology and Neuroscience, University of Bristol, Biomedical Sciences Building, University Walk, Bristol BS8 1TD, UK.
Bristol Veterinary School, University of Bristol, Langford House, Langford BS40 5DU, UK.
Curr Biol. 2020 Sep 21;30(18):R1034-R1035. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.08.038.
Positive animal emotion (affect) is a key component of good animal welfare [1] and plays an important role in stress-coping and resilience [2]. Methods for reliably inducing and measuring positive affect are critical, but both have been limited in availability. In rats, one promising way of inducing positive affective states is by human-simulated rough and tumble play or 'tickling' [3,4]. However, in humans tickling induces both pleasure and displeasure, and neither an established non-verbal indicator of positive affect, the Duchenne smile, nor laughter detects this variation [5,6]. Rats also show individual differences in response to tickling [7], and this variation needs to be readily quantified if we are to ensure that tickling is only implemented where it generates positive affect. Here, we use a validated and objective measure of affective valence, the affective bias test [8], to show that 50 kHz ultrasonic vocalizations provide a quantifiable and graded measure of positive affect that accurately reflects the positive state induced by this human-rat interaction.
积极的动物情绪(情感)是良好动物福利的关键组成部分[1],在应对压力和恢复力方面发挥着重要作用[2]。可靠地诱发和测量积极情感的方法至关重要,但这两种方法的可用性都受到限制。在大鼠中,一种有前途的诱发积极情感状态的方法是人类模拟的打闹或“挠痒痒”[3,4]。然而,在人类中,挠痒痒会引起愉悦和不悦,既没有一种既定的非言语积极情感指标——杜兴式微笑,也没有笑声能检测到这种变化[5,6]。大鼠对挠痒痒的反应也存在个体差异[7],如果我们要确保只有在产生积极情感时才进行挠痒痒,就需要对这种差异进行容易量化。在这里,我们使用经过验证和客观的情感效价测量方法——情感偏向测试[8],表明 50 kHz 超声发声提供了一种可量化和分级的积极情感测量方法,准确反映了这种人与大鼠相互作用所产生的积极状态。