Skip to Content

Partner's stress status influences social buffering effects in rats (2004)

Kiyokawa, Y., Kikusui, T., Takeuchi, Y. et al.

Abstract

The relationship between a social partner's stress status and the social buffering effect was examined in adult male Wistar rats. Fear-conditioned rats were exposed to the same context along with either a shocked or nonshocked conspecific partner. Changes in body temperature and behavioral responses were monitored in order to compare the effects of social buffering. .. The presence of the partner rat attenuated stress-induced hyperthermia, as well as behavioral responses and Fos expression in response to the fearful context, and nonshocked partners were more effective than shocked partners. These findings suggest that the social buffering effect depends on the stress status of the accompanying conspecific animal.?

Published
2004

Animal Type
Rat, Rodent
Topics No terms assigned.

Citation
Kiyokawa, Y., Kikusui, T., Takeuchi, Y. et al. 2004. Partner's stress status influences social buffering effects in rats. Behavioral Neuroscience 118, 798-804.

Full Article
No link assigned.

Back to top