AI Article Synopsis

  • Adverse early experiences are linked to behavioral disorders, and this can be studied in rats through social isolation after weaning.
  • In an experiment with 24 male Wistar rats, researchers tested different rearing conditions: control, environmental enrichment, social isolation, and a combination of enrichment and isolation, observing their social and object interactions.
  • While social isolation increased social interactions during the juvenile phase, environmental enrichment consistently enhanced social interactions across both juvenile and post-pubertal stages, suggesting that early rearing conditions influence later behavior, with a need for further research on protective factors against isolation's negative effects.

Article Abstract

Adverse early experience is generally regarded as a risk factor for both externalizing and internalizing behavioral disorders in humans. It can be modeled in rats by a post-weaning social isolation procedure. Effects of social isolation might possibly be ameliorated by environmental enrichment. In the current study, 24 male Wistar rats were divided post-weaning into four rearing conditions: control, environmental enrichment (EE), social isolation (SI) and a combination of the two experimental conditions; (EE+SI). Two observations of the effects of rearing conditions on the rate of social and object interactions were conducted during the juvenile and post-pubertal stages of development. The SI condition led to a marked increase of social interactions during the juvenile phase, but did not affect object interactions. The EE condition increased the level of social interactions during both the juvenile and post-pubertal measurements. The effects of early rearing conditions on adult exploratory behavior were less clear, with a significant difference between the groups obtained in one of three behavioral tests. Results suggest a general robustness in the development of adult exploratory behavior and anxiety when rats were exposed to early social isolation and provided brief opportunities for social play during the juvenile period. Further studies, aimed at distinguishing play-related protective factors serving against long-term adverse effects of juvenile social isolation, are suggested.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.55782/ane-2015-2017DOI Listing

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