Using rodent models to explore the motivation of helping behaviors has become a new trend in recent years. Empathy, the alleviation of personal distress, and desire for social contact have been considered motivations for rodents to engage in helping behaviors. We used 108 Sprague-Dawley rats as subjects and modified the two-chambered helping behavior experimental setup in Carvalheiro and colleagues' study to explore the main motivations of helping behavior in rodents through three experiments. The findings suggest that (1) the desire for social contact and pursuit of an interesting environment are the primary motivations for helping behavior, regardless of the presence of a dark chamber, and (2) the alleviation of personal distress and prior experience of social contact rather than distress experience contribute to the onset and persistence of helping behavior.
Helping behavior are actions aiming at assisting another individual in need or to relieve their distress. The occurrence of this behavior not only depends on automated physiological mechanisms, such as imitation or emotional contagion, that is, the individual’s emotion and physiological state matching with others, but also needs motivation to sustain. From a comparative and developmental perspective, we discover that the motivation for helping behavior has a deep foundation both phylogenetically and ontogenetically. For example, empathic concern for others, relieving personal distress and the desire for social contact are universal motivations across rodents, non-human primates and human early childhoods. Therefore, a circle-layered model integrating evidences for motivation for helping behavior from rodent to human early childhood research is proposed: the inner circle contains the emotional-behavioral system and the outer circle contains the affective-cognitive system. The application of this model has significance for both behavioral neuroscience research and cultivating prosocial behavior in human society.
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