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Multiple animal positioning system shows that socially-reared mice influence the social proximity of isolation-reared cagemates.

Nozomi EndoWaka UjitaMasaya FujiwaraHideaki MiyauchiHiroyuki MishimaYusuke MakinoLisa HashimotoHiroshi OyamaManabu MakinodanMayumi NishiChiharu TohyamaMasaki Kakeyama
Published in: Communications biology (2018)
Social relationships are a key determinant of social behaviour, and disruption of social behaviour is a major symptom of several psychiatric disorders. However, few studies have analysed social relationships among multiple individuals in a group or how social relationships within a group influence the behaviour of members with impaired socialisation. Here, we developed a video-analysis-based system, the Multiple-Animal Positioning System (MAPS), to automatically and separately analyse the social behaviour of multiple individuals in group housing. Using MAPS, we show that social isolation of male mice during adolescence leads to impaired social proximity in adulthood. The phenotype of these socially isolated mice was partially rescued by cohabitation with group-housed (socially-reared) mice, indicating that both individual behavioural traits and those of cagemates influence social proximity. Furthermore, we demonstrate that low reactive behaviour of other cagemates also influence individual social proximity in male mice.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • type diabetes
  • depressive symptoms
  • skeletal muscle
  • genome wide
  • metabolic syndrome
  • early life
  • data analysis