Abstract

Many animals become more motivated to interact after a period of isolation. This phenomenon may involve general drives, e.g. for social touch or companionship, as well as drives that are specific to particular peers, and which ultimately serve to reestablish relationships between the individuals. Female degus are known to be affiliative with multiple other individuals, including unrelated and unfamiliar conspecifics, offering an opportunity to study social motivation independent from exclusive pair-bonds or overt, same-sex competition. We attempted to disentangle factors driving peer interaction by examining reunion behavior across several social isolation and separation manipulations. High levels of interaction were observed between adult females who had been separated even without isolation, revealing a drive to re-establish relationships with specific peers. The content of separation-only reunions differed from isolation, with the latter involving more early-session interaction, higher levels of allogrooming before rear-sniffing, and a higher ratio of chitter vocalizations. To assess whether post-isolation behavior was related to stress, we examined reunions following a non-social (footshock) stressor. Like isolation, footshock increased early-session interactions, but did not increase allogrooming before rear-sniffing or chittering, as compared with controls. To test whether separation-only reunion behavior shared qualities with relationship formation, we also examined reunions of new (stranger) dyads. Strangers exhibited higher levels of interaction than cagemates, with particularly high levels of late-session rear-sniffing. Like separation-only reunions, strangers showed more non-chitter vocalizations and lower levels of allogrooming before rear-sniffing. Across experiments, an exploratory clustering method was used to identify vocalizations that differed between conditions. This yielded promising leads for future investigation, including a chaff-type syllable that may have been more common during relationship renewal. Overall, results are consistent with the hypothesis that female degu reunions are supported by both general and peer-stimulus specific drives, expressed through the structure of physical and vocal interactions over time.

Highlights

  • In many animal species, a period of social deprivation can cause a subsequent rebound of interaction

  • In pair-bonding species, for example, general social drives are largely exclusive to a single individual, so the expression of motivation for one, specific peer is conflated with social motivation more generally

  • The time spent in agonistic behavior did not appear to vary across the conditions (F2,16 = 0.23, p = 0.80)

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Summary

Introduction

A period of social deprivation can cause a subsequent rebound of interaction. (e.g., humans [1] and rats [2]). One distinction that can be made is between “stimulus-specific” drives between individuals that have not seen oneanother for a period of time and more general drives for, for example, social touch, companionship, or a sense of social agency. These two domains—stimulus-specific and stimulus-general—are difficult to isolate experimentally. Some insight on stimulus-specific social drives comes from research on greeting behavior between individuals that have been separate for extended periods of time Such greetings are thought to help reestablish dyadic relationships and trust [5,6,7,8]. An important question is what contribution stress, by itself, contributes to interactive behavior after isolation

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