AI Article Synopsis

  • Social defeat during adolescence in rats, used as a model for bullying, reveals significant differences in response based on emotional reactivity and coping styles.
  • RHA rats (high avoidance) exhibited increased impulsivity and changes in their adult behavior after social defeat, while RLA rats (low avoidance) showed unexpected tendencies towards higher aggression.
  • The study highlights that social stress can disrupt the personality development of RHA rats, particularly impacting their behavior in frustration and impulsivity, although social defeat did not alter their overall aggression.

Article Abstract

Adverse and stressful experiences during adolescence are often of a social nature. The social defeat model in rats is used as an animal model for bullying in humans. Usually large individual differences in response to social defeat are found. The personality type that is mostly affected and the underlying mechanisms are unknown. We used male rats of the Roman selection lines to test whether social defeat (between postnatal days 45 and 57) followed by social isolation has a different impact in animals with divergent levels of emotional reactivity and coping style. The level of offensive aggression, impulsivity and performance during frustrating non-reward (extinction) were used as measures for the adult coping style of animals. Impulsivity was measured by performance on an unpredictable operant conditioning schedule (variable interval-15, VI-15) for food reinforcement. This study demonstrates that the adult, baseline level of impulsivity is higher in Roman high avoidance (RHA) rats. RHA rats showed a higher number of lever presses compared to Roman low avoidance (RLA) rats on a VI-15 schedule. The level of offensive aggression did not differ between the two lines. Surprisingly, a tendency towards more offensive aggression in RLA rats was found. Social stress during adolescence disturbed the normal development of adult personality, mostly in RHA rats. RHA rats that were defeated during adolescence reduced the number of lever presses on the VI-15 schedule of reinforcement and were more persistent during a session of frustrating non-reward. However, we did not find an effect of social defeat on performance during extinction. A tendency towards increased attack latencies after social defeat in adolescence was found. The time spent on offensive aggression was unaffected by social defeat.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.physbeh.2011.12.013DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

social defeat
24
offensive aggression
16
rha rats
16
social
10
rats
9
roman high
8
low avoidance
8
social stress
8
coping style
8
level offensive
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!