1. Behavioral mirroring in Wistar rats investigated through temporal pattern analysis.
- Author
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Casarrubea M, Leca JB, Gunst N, Aiello S, and Crescimanno G
- Subjects
- Animals, Rats, Male, Social Interaction, Social Behavior, Rats, Wistar, Behavior, Animal physiology
- Abstract
The study of social interactions lies at the core of several disciplines such as psychiatry, psychology and ethology, just to name a few. In this context, understanding the temporal patterns underlying interactive behaviors is of crucial importance. Here, we employed T-pattern detection and analysis to study social interactions in ten pairs of Wistar rats tested in an Open-Field environment. We found four different categories of interactive behaviors. One of them was of particular interest to us because it consisted of behavioral events that, taken individually, should not underlie an interaction of any kind; however, they were included in T-patterns, which is suggestive of a dyadic temporal coordination in the behavioral expression of two individuals. Within this category, we described for the first time a new subcategory of apparent interaction patterns characterized by events that one of the two rats repeats only if previously produced by the partner (i.e., behavioral mirroring). These findings are discussed in functional terms for rodents and in light of our current understanding of social interactions in humans., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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