Abstract

Play has been proposed as a promising indicator of positive animal welfare. We aimed to study play in rats across contexts (conspecific/heterospecific) and types (social: pinning, being pinned; solitary: scampering), and we investigated its structure using behavioral sequence analysis. Group-housed (three per cage) adolescent male Lister Hooded rats (n = 21) were subjected to a Play-In-Pairs test: after a 3 hour isolation period, a pair of cage-mates was returned to the home cage and both social and solitary play were scored for 20 min. This procedure was repeated for each pair combination across three consecutive days, and individual play scores were calculated. Heterospecific play was measured using a Tickling test: rats were individually tickled by the experimenter through bouts of gentle, rapid finger movements on their underside, and the number of positive 50 kHz frequency modulated vocalizations and experimenter-directed approach behaviors were recorded. Both of the above tests were compared with social play in the home cage. While conspecific play in both the Play-In-Pairs test and home cage were correlated, both seemed to be unrelated to heterospecific play in the Tickling test. During the Play-In-Pairs test, although both solitary and social play types occurred, they were unrelated, and solitary locomotor play of one rat did not predict the subsequent play behavior of its cage mate. Analysis of play structure revealed that social play occurred more often in bouts of repeated behaviors while solitary play sequences did not follow a specific pattern. If play is to be used as an indicator of positive welfare in rats, context, type and structure differences should be taken into account.

Highlights

  • Animal Behavior and Cognition 2014, 1(4):489-501 namely social play, locomotor-rotational play and object-directed play (Held & Spinka, 2011), the most commonly studied of which is social play (Burghardt, 2005)

  • We found that play behavior in rats differed depending on the context; conspecific Rough-andTumble play seemed to be unrelated to vocalizations emitted during heterospecific play

  • We found that play types were unrelated, and the sequence analysis of play structure revealed a difference between social and solitary play

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Animal Behavior and Cognition 2014, 1(4):489501 namely social play, locomotor-rotational play and object-directed play (Held & Spinka, 2011), the most commonly studied of which is social play (Burghardt, 2005). Play can act as a reinforcer in the same way as food and sex (Vanderschuren, 2010), since the same neurotransmitters that mediate the motivational and hedonic properties of reward have been shown to affect social play in rats (Burgdorf & Panksepp, 2006; Vanderschuren, 2010). Frequency modulated 50 kHz calls have been suggested to reflect positively valenced emotional states (Burgdorf et al, 2008; 2011) Rats emit these frequency modulated 50 kHz calls in both conspecific and heterospecific play contexts (‘tickling’ administered by the experimenter; Panksepp & Burgdorf, 1999), and some evidence suggests that they will self-administer the playback of such calls if given the possibility to do so (Burgdorf et al, 2008). Social isolation increases the probability that play initiations result in the play

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call