Abstract
There is growing interest in the mechanisms for natural sensory learning in pro-social contexts. Studies using a maternal model of social behavior in the mouse have provided new insight into the auditory processing of behaviorally relevant pup vocalizations, which are used as communication signals to elicit pup retrieval behavior by adult females. Whether neural and behavioral plasticity in response to these vocalizations reflect auditory associative learning linking the sounds to pups, versus simply a change in maternal responsiveness to evolved vocal signals, remains an open question. Here we describe a T-maze paradigm to track auditory learning as we pair an initially neutral, non-ethological stimulus with delivery of a pup for retrieval, which is intrinsically reinforcing for rodents.•Training is rapid and completely appetitive.•Over a period of 7 × 50-minute daily training sessions, animals increasingly use the sound to guide their arm choice for pup retrieval, with an increase in performance from chance to an average of ~80% on day 7.•This pairing method establishes a newly-formed sensory association using a natural maternal behavioral response, and lays a solid foundation for studies into the neurochemical and circuit mechanisms that mediate auditory associative learning in natural social contexts.
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