Swanson H H, Schuster R
Netherlands Institute for Brain Research.
Horm Behav. 1987 Sep;21(3):310-30. doi: 10.1016/0018-506x(87)90017-1.
A cooperative behavior, coordinated shuttling by pairs of laboratory rats in a rectangular chamber, can be influenced strongly by an interaction between housing and sex. Males and females learn readily when housed together socially, but individual housing ("isolation") causes severe deficits selectively in males. The aim of the present study was to examine the role of testosterone in the differential effects of housing on cooperation learning. Males of a Sprague-Dawley derived strain were housed socially or individually and treated daily in one of three ways (six groups, n = 6 per group): (1) castrated, injected with oil vehicle (without testosterone); (2) castrated, injected with 500 micrograms testosterone propionate (exogenous TP); and (3) sham operated, injected with oil (intact, endogenous testosterone). Socially housed pairs learned readily in all treatment groups, using strategies of coordination in which stereotyped contact or aggressive interactions were interpolated. Individual housing was associated with a deficit, but only in the TP-treated and intact groups in which some pairs either did not learn or performed poorly. The deficit was associated with violent fighting and extreme and stable differentiation into dominants and subordinates, the latter exhibiting prolonged freezing. Oil-treated castrates, when housed individually, were unimpaired and actually surpassed their socially housed counterparts on some measures. Their success was associated with an increase only in low-level aggression. The housing-hormone interaction in male rats suggests that testosterone influences the capacity to develop cooperative behavior by modulating both aggression and its consequences for the relationship between partners. The use of social interaction models, including cooperation, for the study of behavior-hormone interactions was also discussed.
一种合作行为,即实验室大鼠成对在矩形箱中进行协调穿梭,会受到饲养方式和性别的相互作用强烈影响。雄性和雌性大鼠在群居时很容易学习,但单独饲养(“隔离”)会选择性地导致雄性大鼠出现严重缺陷。本研究的目的是检验睾酮在饲养方式对合作学习的不同影响中的作用。选用斯普拉格 - 道利品系的雄性大鼠,将其群居或单独饲养,并每天以三种方式之一进行处理(六组,每组n = 6):(1)阉割,注射油剂载体(无睾酮);(2)阉割,注射500微克丙酸睾酮(外源性TP);(3)假手术,注射油剂(完整,内源性睾酮)。群居的大鼠对在所有处理组中都很容易学习,并采用协调策略,其中穿插着刻板的接触或攻击性互动。单独饲养与缺陷有关,但仅在接受TP处理和完整的组中出现,其中一些大鼠对要么没有学习,要么表现不佳。这种缺陷与激烈打斗以及极端且稳定地分化为主导者和从属者有关,后者表现出长时间的僵住不动。接受油剂处理的阉割大鼠单独饲养时没有受损,实际上在某些指标上超过了群居的同类大鼠。它们的成功仅与低水平攻击行为的增加有关。雄性大鼠的饲养 - 激素相互作用表明,睾酮通过调节攻击行为及其对伙伴关系的影响来影响发展合作行为的能力。还讨论了使用包括合作在内的社会互动模型来研究行为 - 激素相互作用。