Towards improved animal models for evaluating social cognition and its disruption in schizophrenia: The CNTRICS initiative

•Social cognition, the guiding of behaviour by social cues, is disrupted in schizophrenia.•No specific treatments are available, and improved animal models are needed for their discovery.•A meeting was coordinated by the NIMH-funded “CNTRICS” group to discuss improved procedures.•Two were selected:...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews 2013-11, Vol.37 (9), p.2166-2180
Hauptverfasser: Millan, Mark J., Bales, Karen L.
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description •Social cognition, the guiding of behaviour by social cues, is disrupted in schizophrenia.•No specific treatments are available, and improved animal models are needed for their discovery.•A meeting was coordinated by the NIMH-funded “CNTRICS” group to discuss improved procedures.•Two were selected: social recognition/preference in rodents and gaze-following in non-human primates.•Both these and complementary models require further development and better translation into humans. Social cognition refers to processes used to monitor and interpret social signals from others, to decipher their state of mind, emotional status and intentions, and select appropriate social behaviour. Social cognition is sophisticated in humans, being embedded with verbal language and enacted in a complex cultural environment. Its disruption characterises the entire course of schizophrenia and is correlated with poor functional outcome. Further, deficits in social cognition are related to impairment in other cognitive domains, positive symptoms (paranoia and delusions) and negative symptoms (social withdrawal and reduced motivation). In light of the significance and inadequate management of social cognition deficits, there is a need for translatable experimental procedures for their study, and identification of effective pharmacotherapy. No single paradigm captures the multi-dimensional nature of social cognition, and procedures for assessing ability to infer mental states are not well-developed for experimental therapeutic settings. Accordingly, a recent CNTRICS meeting prioritised procedures for measuring a specific construct: “acquisition and recognition of affective (emotional) states”, coupled to individual recognition. Two complementary paradigms for refinement were identified: social recognition/preference in rodents, and visual tracking of social scenes in non-human primates (NHPs). Social recognition is disrupted in genetic, developmental or pharmacological disease models for schizophrenia, and performance in both procedures is improved by the neuropeptide oxytocin. The present article surveys a broad range of procedures for studying social cognition in rodents and NHPs, discusses advantages and drawbacks, and focuses on development of social recognition/preference and gaze-following paradigms for improved study of social cognition deficits in schizophrenia and their potential treatment.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2013.09.012
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Social cognition refers to processes used to monitor and interpret social signals from others, to decipher their state of mind, emotional status and intentions, and select appropriate social behaviour. Social cognition is sophisticated in humans, being embedded with verbal language and enacted in a complex cultural environment. Its disruption characterises the entire course of schizophrenia and is correlated with poor functional outcome. Further, deficits in social cognition are related to impairment in other cognitive domains, positive symptoms (paranoia and delusions) and negative symptoms (social withdrawal and reduced motivation). In light of the significance and inadequate management of social cognition deficits, there is a need for translatable experimental procedures for their study, and identification of effective pharmacotherapy. No single paradigm captures the multi-dimensional nature of social cognition, and procedures for assessing ability to infer mental states are not well-developed for experimental therapeutic settings. Accordingly, a recent CNTRICS meeting prioritised procedures for measuring a specific construct: “acquisition and recognition of affective (emotional) states”, coupled to individual recognition. Two complementary paradigms for refinement were identified: social recognition/preference in rodents, and visual tracking of social scenes in non-human primates (NHPs). Social recognition is disrupted in genetic, developmental or pharmacological disease models for schizophrenia, and performance in both procedures is improved by the neuropeptide oxytocin. 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Social cognition refers to processes used to monitor and interpret social signals from others, to decipher their state of mind, emotional status and intentions, and select appropriate social behaviour. Social cognition is sophisticated in humans, being embedded with verbal language and enacted in a complex cultural environment. Its disruption characterises the entire course of schizophrenia and is correlated with poor functional outcome. Further, deficits in social cognition are related to impairment in other cognitive domains, positive symptoms (paranoia and delusions) and negative symptoms (social withdrawal and reduced motivation). In light of the significance and inadequate management of social cognition deficits, there is a need for translatable experimental procedures for their study, and identification of effective pharmacotherapy. No single paradigm captures the multi-dimensional nature of social cognition, and procedures for assessing ability to infer mental states are not well-developed for experimental therapeutic settings. Accordingly, a recent CNTRICS meeting prioritised procedures for measuring a specific construct: “acquisition and recognition of affective (emotional) states”, coupled to individual recognition. Two complementary paradigms for refinement were identified: social recognition/preference in rodents, and visual tracking of social scenes in non-human primates (NHPs). Social recognition is disrupted in genetic, developmental or pharmacological disease models for schizophrenia, and performance in both procedures is improved by the neuropeptide oxytocin. 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subjects Affective behaviour
Animals
Antipsychotic
Cognition Disorders - diagnosis
Cognition Disorders - etiology
Disease Models, Animal
Emotion
Eye-tracking
Gaze
Humans
Mouse
Negative symptoms
Non-human primate
Oxytocin
Primates
Psychosis
Rat
Schizophrenia - complications
Sociability
Social Behavior
Social recognition
title Towards improved animal models for evaluating social cognition and its disruption in schizophrenia: The CNTRICS initiative
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