Burbano Lombana Daniel Alberto, Macrì Simone, Porfiri Maurizio
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Tandon School of Engineering, New York University, Brooklyn, NY, United States.
Centre for Behavioural Sciences and Mental Health, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Viale Regina Elena, Rome, Italy.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2021 Sep 9;15:730372. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2021.730372. eCollection 2021.
Seeking to match our emotional state with one of those around us is known as emotional contagion-a fundamental biological process that underlies social behavior across several species and taxa. While emotional contagion has been traditionally considered to be a prerogative of mammals and birds, recent findings are demonstrating otherwise. Here, we investigate emotional contagion in groups of zebrafish, a freshwater model species which is gaining momentum in preclinical studies. Zebrafish have high genetic homology to humans, and they exhibit a complex behavioral repertoire amenable to study social behavior. To investigate whether individual emotional states can be transmitted to group members, we pharmacologically modulated anxiety-related behaviors of a single fish through Citalopram administration and we assessed whether the altered emotional state spread to a group of four untreated conspecifics. By capitalizing upon our in-house developed tracking algorithm, we successfully preserved the identity of all the subjects and thoroughly described their individual and social behavioral phenotypes. In accordance with our predictions, we observed that Citalopram administration consistently reduced behavioral anxiety of the treated individual, in the form of reduced geotaxis, and that such a behavioral pattern readily generalized to the untreated subjects. A transfer entropy analysis of causal interactions within the group revealed that emotional contagion was directional, whereby the treated individual influenced untreated subjects, but not vice-versa. This study offers additional evidence that emotional contagion is biologically preserved in simpler living organisms amenable to preclinical investigations.
试图使我们的情绪状态与周围的人相匹配,这被称为情绪感染——这是一种基本的生物学过程,是跨多个物种和分类群的社会行为的基础。虽然情绪感染传统上被认为是哺乳动物和鸟类的特权,但最近的研究结果却并非如此。在这里,我们研究斑马鱼群体中的情绪感染,斑马鱼是一种淡水模式物种,在临床前研究中越来越受到关注。斑马鱼与人类具有高度的基因同源性,并且它们表现出适合研究社会行为的复杂行为模式。为了研究个体的情绪状态是否能传递给群体成员,我们通过给予西酞普兰对一条鱼的焦虑相关行为进行药理学调节,并评估这种改变的情绪状态是否会传播到由四条未处理的同种鱼组成的群体中。通过利用我们内部开发的跟踪算法,我们成功地识别了所有个体,并全面描述了它们的个体和社会行为表型。与我们的预测一致,我们观察到给予西酞普兰持续降低了被处理个体的行为焦虑,表现为趋地性降低,并且这种行为模式很容易推广到未处理的个体。对群体内因果相互作用的转移熵分析表明,情绪感染是有方向性的,即被处理的个体影响未处理的个体,反之则不然。这项研究提供了更多证据,证明情绪感染在适合临床前研究的更简单生物体中在生物学上是存在的。