Abstract

Rats emit a variety of calls in the 40–80 kHz range (50 kHz calls). While these calls are generally associated with positive affect, it is unclear whether certain calls might be used selectively in certain contexts. To examine this, we looked at ultrasonic calls in 30–40 day old male rats during the expectation of either play or food, both of which are reinforcing. Behavior and vocalizations were recorded while rats were in a test chamber awaiting the arrival of a play partner or food over seven days of testing. Control groups were included for the non-specific effects of food deprivation and social isolation. Play reward led to an increase in 50 kHz vocalizations, generally, with specific increases in trill and “trill with jump” calls not seen in other groups. Expectation of food reward did not lead to a significant increase in vocalizations of any type, perhaps due to the young age of our study group. Further, rats that were food deprived for the food expectation study showed markedly lower calls overall and had a different profile of call types compared to rats that were socially isolated. Taken together, the results suggest that trill-associated calls may be used selectively when rats are socially isolated and/or expecting a social encounter.

Highlights

  • A predominate theory about the purpose of ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) in rats is that these calls signal the affective state of the animal [1,2]

  • Significant differences were seen between play and food groups in trills with jumps (t(22) = 2.39, p = 0.026) and short calls (t(22) = 3.08, p = 0.005) the strength of this latter effect is due to the fact that there were zero short calls emitted by the food deprived animals on day 1

  • The primary goal of this study was to compare the vocalizations emitted by male rats in anticipation of two types of reward: food and social play

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Summary

Introduction

A predominate theory about the purpose of ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) in rats is that these calls signal the affective state of the animal [1,2]. Vocalizations of the 50 kHz type are strongly associated with non-social rewarding stimuli. The animal in that study showed a marked increase in 50 kHz USVs to cues associated with the electrical stimulation as well as to the stimulation itself. 50 kHz calls have been associated with cues indicating food reward [8,9,10] or during anticipation of daily feeding [11]. These findings suggest that 50 kHz USVs signal positive affective states associated with rewarding contexts, independent of social context

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