Playback of Alarm and Appetitive Calls Differentially Impacts Vocal, Heart-Rate, and Motor Response in Rats

Our rudimentary knowledge about rat intraspecific vocal system of information exchange is limited by experimental models of communication. Rats emit 50-kHz ultrasonic vocalizations in appetitive states and 22-kHz ones in aversive states. Both affective states influence heart rate. We propose a behav...

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Veröffentlicht in:iScience 2020-10, Vol.23 (10), p.101577-101577, Article 101577
Hauptverfasser: Olszyński, Krzysztof H., Polowy, Rafał, Małż, Monika, Boguszewski, Paweł M., Filipkowski, Robert K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Our rudimentary knowledge about rat intraspecific vocal system of information exchange is limited by experimental models of communication. Rats emit 50-kHz ultrasonic vocalizations in appetitive states and 22-kHz ones in aversive states. Both affective states influence heart rate. We propose a behavioral model employing exposure to pre-recorded playbacks in home-cage-like conditions. Fifty-kHz playbacks elicited the most vocalizations (>60 calls per minute, mostly of 50-kHz type), increased heart rate, and locomotor activity. In contrast, 22-kHz playback led to abrupt decrease in heart rate and locomotor activity. Observed effects were more pronounced in singly housed rats compared with the paired housed group; they were stronger when evoked by natural playback than by corresponding artificial tones. Finally, we also observed correlations between the number of vocalizations, heart rate levels, and locomotor activity. The correlations were especially strong in response to 50-kHz playback. [Display omitted] •Rats vocalized abundantly when exposed to recorded ultrasonic playback•Playback of appetitive calls caused an increase in heart rate•Playback of alarm/aversive calls caused a decrease in heart rate•Singly housed rats exhibited more vocalizations and higher heart rate Biological Sciences; Animals; Ethology
ISSN:2589-0042
2589-0042
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2020.101577