| Literature DB >> 26664938 |
Sabine Vögeli1, Martin Wolf2, Beat Wechsler3, Lorenz Gygax3.
Abstract
Many stimuli evoke short-term emotional reactions. These reactions may play an important role in assessing how a subject perceives a stimulus. Additionally, long-term mood may modulate the emotional reactions but it is still unclear in what way. The question seems to be important in terms of animal welfare, as a negative mood may taint emotional reactions. In the present study with sheep, we investigated the effects of thermal stimuli on emotional reactions and the potential modulating effect of mood induced by manipulations of the housing conditions. We assume that unpredictable, stimulus-poor conditions lead to a negative and predictable, stimulus-rich conditions to a positive mood state. The thermal stimuli were applied to the upper breast during warm ambient temperatures: hot (as presumably negative), intermediate, and cold (as presumably positive). We recorded cortical activity by functional near-infrared spectroscopy, restlessness behavior (e.g., locomotor activity, aversive behaviors), and ear postures as indicators of emotional reactions. The strongest hemodynamic reaction was found during a stimulus of intermediate valence independent of the animal's housing conditions, whereas locomotor activity, ear movements, and aversive behaviors were seen most in sheep from the unpredictable, stimulus-poor housing conditions, independent of stimulus valence. We conclude that, sheep perceived the thermal stimuli and differentiated between some of them. An adequate interpretation of the neuronal activity pattern remains difficult, though. The effects of housing conditions were small indicating that the induction of mood was only modestly efficacious. Therefore, a modulating effect of mood on the emotional reaction was not found.Entities:
Keywords: emotion; functional near-infrared spectroscopy; housing conditions; mood; sheep; temperature
Year: 2015 PMID: 26664938 PMCID: PMC4672170 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2015.00009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Average changes in concentration of O. Hot-int (hot-intermediate) and cold-int (cold-intermediate) describe the direction of temperature change from the inter-stimulus to the stimulus phase. Black lines: models with highest model probabilities (O2Hb and HHb: the main effects stimulus valence as a factor and time as well as their interaction). Thin lines: 95% confidence intervals. See text for further information on the models. The best model did not include housing condition; hence, the displayed pattern was similar for both housing conditions. The average temperature profile per valence is displayed by the curves in the middle. Solid line: designated temperature for the stimulus; dotted line: designated temperature for the inter-stimulus phase.
Figure 2General activity [distance covered, m/s, (A)], ear movements [degrees/s, (B)], proportion of forward (C) and backward (D) ear postures as a function of sheep’s housing condition (unpredictable, stimulus-poor and predictable, stimulus-rich), stimulus type and phase of the stimulus (B = before/pre-stimulus, S = stimulus, A = after/post-stimulus). Hot-int (hot-intermediate) and cold-int (cold-intermediate) describe the direction of temperature change from the inter-stimulus to the stimulus phase (see also Figure 1B). Box plots indicate data range as well as median, lower, and upper quartile. Thick black lines: model estimates with the highest model probabilities; gray lines: models with second-highest model probability; thin lines: 95% confidence intervals. Y -axes are cropped in (A–D) to enhance visibility of the pattern reflected by the statistical estimates.