d'Isa Raffaele
Institute of Experimental Neurology (INSPE), Division of Neuroscience (DNS), IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan, Italy.
Front Psychol. 2025 Feb 3;15:1532975. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1532975. eCollection 2024.
Rodents, in particular rats and mice, are currently the most widely employed animal models in psychology and behavioral neuroscience. Nevertheless, an interesting historical question is: when was the first rodent behavioral study performed and by whom? The current article presents the first rodent behavioral study in the history of science: a case of interspecies social bonding between a rat and a dog, observed in 1822 by the British chemist Samuel Moss (1794-1868) and subsequently described by the same in a scientific article in 1836. In the present article, after a biographical sketch of Samuel Moss, I examine in detail the notable case of interspecies bonding observed by Moss. This case is notable under several points of view. First, Moss's rat was an albino, a variety which at that time was extremely rare. Moreover, at that time, in the Western world rats were mostly seen as pest animals or baits for rat-catching sports, and were not kept as pets. The color of the rat played a key role in its fate, being the reason for which it was originally brought to Moss and for which Moss decided to keep it under his care. Third, the relationship that arose between the rat and the dog is even more surprising if we consider that the dog was a trained rat-catcher. Importantly, this rat-dog bonding case, which showcased the tameness of Moss's albino rat in both lay and scientific publications, represented the first popularization of the docility of albino rats. After having outlined Moss's case, considering the importance of albino rats in our current society, both in scientific research (where the albino rat has become the prototype of the laboratory rat) and as pets, I provide an historical contextualization regarding albino rodents, starting from the 17th century, and I then trace the history of the post-Moss diffusion of human-bred albino rats and mice in the 19th century.
啮齿动物,尤其是大鼠和小鼠,目前是心理学和行为神经科学中使用最广泛的动物模型。然而,一个有趣的历史问题是:首次进行啮齿动物行为研究是在何时,由谁进行的?本文介绍了科学史上首次啮齿动物行为研究:1822年英国化学家塞缪尔·莫斯(1794 - 1868)观察到一只大鼠和一只狗之间的种间社会联系,随后他在1836年的一篇科学文章中对此进行了描述。在本文中,在对塞缪尔·莫斯进行传记式简述之后,我详细考察了莫斯所观察到的这一显著的种间联系案例。从几个角度来看,这个案例都很值得注意。首先,莫斯的大鼠是一只白化鼠,这种品种在当时极其罕见。此外,在那个时候,在西方世界,大鼠大多被视为害虫或捕鼠运动的诱饵,而不是作为宠物饲养。大鼠的颜色在其命运中起到了关键作用,这既是它最初被带到莫斯身边的原因,也是莫斯决定照顾它的原因。第三,如果我们考虑到这只狗是一只训练有素的捕鼠犬,那么大鼠和狗之间产生的关系就更加令人惊讶了。重要的是,这个大鼠与狗的亲密关系案例,在通俗和科学出版物中都展示了莫斯的白化鼠的温顺,代表了白化鼠温顺特性的首次传播。在概述了莫斯的案例之后,考虑到白化鼠在我们当今社会的重要性,无论是在科学研究中(白化鼠已成为实验室大鼠的原型)还是作为宠物,我从17世纪开始对白化啮齿动物进行了历史背景介绍,然后追溯了19世纪人类培育的白化大鼠和小鼠在莫斯之后的传播历史。