“…Several studies have shown that these stocks can differ at several levels, including brain (Rex, Voigt, Gustedt, Beckett, & Fink, 2004;Swerdlow et al, 2005;Zamudio, Fregoso, Miranda, Cruz, & Flores, 2005) and pharmacological reactivity (Arnold, Dielenberg, & McGregor, 2010;Entlerova et al, 2013;Koss, Einat, Schloesser, Manji, & Rubinow, 2012;Manduca et al, 2014;Qu et al, 2009;Rex et al, 2004;Swerdlow et al, 2005). Regarding behavior, stock differences were obtained in several functions, especially anxiety (Rex et al, 2004), fear-conditioning (Graham, Yoon, Lee, & Kim, 2009;Keeley, Bye, Trow, & McDonald, 2015;Walker, Naicker, Hinwood, Dunn, & Day, 2009), defensive reactions to predator odors (Rosen, West, & Donley, 2006;Staples & McGregor, 2006), stress reactivity (Faraday, 2002), openfield behavior (Zamudio et al, 2005), novelty-seeking (Walker et al, 2009), social play behavior (Ku, Weir, Silverman, Berman, & Bauman, 2016;Manduca et al, 2014), spatial learning (Keeley et al, 2015), object discrimination (Andrews, Jansen, Linders, Princen, & Broekkamp, 1995), or prepulse inhibition (Faraday, Blakeman, & Grunberg, 2005;Qu et al, 2009;Varty & Higgins, 1994). While it is difficult to extract a consistent pattern, WU rats appear more anxious than other stocks in a number of different situations, whereas SD rats appear to exhibit particularly high levels of social play behavior.…”