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Neophobia, but not perch hopping, is sensitive to long-term chronic stress intensity.

Ursula K BeattieLily MikolajczakNina FeffermanL Michael Romero
Published in: Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological and integrative physiology (2023)
To further elucidate the role that wear-and-tear plays in the transition from acute to chronic stress, we manipulated the intensity and duration of applied chronic stress to determine if behavior would respond proportionately. We brought wild house sparrows into captivity and subjected them to high-stress, medium-stress, low-stress, or captivity-only. We varied the number of stressors per day and the duration of stress periods to vary wear-and-tear, and thus the potential to exhibit chronic stress symptoms. The behaviors we assessed were neophobia (the fear of the new; assessed via food approach latency) and perch hopping (activity). We predicted that our birds would show proportionate decreases in neophobia and activity throughout a long-term chronic stress paradigm. Our results indicate that neophobia is sensitive to the intensity of chronic stress, however, the birds became more neophobic, which was the opposite of what we expected. Conversely, perch hopping did not differ across treatment groups and is thus not sensitive to the intensity of chronic stress. Together, these data show that different behavioral measurements are impacted differently by chronic stress.
Keyphrases
  • stress induced
  • machine learning
  • climate change
  • human health
  • artificial intelligence