RE-GROUPING AFTER SOCIAL STRESS : EVALUATING THE EFFECT OF SOCIAL DEFEAT STRESS ON ALLOGROOMING AND HOMECAGE INTERACTIONS IN MICE
Université de Lausanne
Presentation
Date TBA
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Poster Board
PS07-10AM-410
Poster
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Preliminary data in our lab suggested that the stress generated by classical footshock fear conditioning is sufficient to alter prosocial grooming behaviors among cagemates at regrouping. Consequently, we aimed to leverage a combination of classical behavior, ultrasonic vocalizations recordings and supervised machine learning to investigate the effects of social defeat stress on social dynamics in male mice.
We hypothesized that unstressed individuals would provide increased prosocial behavior towards defeated animals to buffer distress. We also hypothesized that other behavioral domains would be differentially modulated by housing conditions. Thus, we housed mice in different types of triads composed either of stressed and unstressed mice or of exclusively stressed individuals. Preliminary evidence suggests a modulation of anxiety-like behavior and learned avoidance.
Our thorough approach capitalizes on the latest machine learning models to enable semi-automated analysis of behavior in the homecage as well as during standardized behavioral tests to uncover aspects of social and individual behaviors.
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