2013
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.12430
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Measuring risk‐taking in mice: balancing the risk between seeking reward and danger

Abstract: Assessing risk is an essential part of human behaviour and may be disrupted in a number of psychiatric conditions. Currently, in many animal experimental designs the basis of the potential 'risk' is loss or attenuation of reward, which fail to capture 'real-life' risky situations where there is a trade-off between a separate cost and reward. The development of rodent tasks where two separate and conflicting factors are traded against each other has begun to address this discrepancy. Here, we discuss the merits… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…We assayed basal activity for 2-hours on three consecutive days using a standardised general measure where movement is detected by consecutive breaks of two infrared beams (‘run’) (43). Cdkn1c BACx1 mice were hypoactive relative to their WT littermates, overall making nearly half as many runs in any given session (main effect of GENOTYPE: F 1,47  =   8.49, P  = 0.005) (Fig.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We assayed basal activity for 2-hours on three consecutive days using a standardised general measure where movement is detected by consecutive breaks of two infrared beams (‘run’) (43). Cdkn1c BACx1 mice were hypoactive relative to their WT littermates, overall making nearly half as many runs in any given session (main effect of GENOTYPE: F 1,47  =   8.49, P  = 0.005) (Fig.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LMA behaviour was tested using as described (43) with two infra-red beams crossing each cage 30mm from each end and 10mm from the floor of the chamber. Beam breaks were recorded as an indication of activity, using a computer running custom written BBC Basic V6 programmes with additional interfacing by ARACHNID (Cambridge Cognition Ltd, Cambridge, U.K.).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, neurobiological correlates of impulsivity and sensation seeking have been identified (Buckholtz et al, 2010; Casey, Jones, and Somerville, 2011; Congdon and Canli, 2008; Roberti, 2004), and both traits are commonly measured in non-human subjects (Dent, Isles, and Humby, 2014; Fox, Hand, and Reilly, 2008; Zuckerman, 1984). In contrast, the construct of ASB – particularly rule-breaking forms of ASB – involves evaluating behavior with reference to a socially-defined and culturally-specific set of norms and rules, and is thus considerably more difficult to operationalize in non-human animals.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…При сравнительном анализе эффекта различ-ных запахов хищника на домовую мышь выявлен бо-лее выраженный ответ мышей на хемосигналы кошки по сравнению, например, с запахом змеи [21], крысы [22] и лисьим феромоном триметил-тиазолином (ТМТ) в ес-тественной концентрации [23].…”
Section: Discussionunclassified