| Literature DB >> 28117411 |
Elisabetta Versace1, Ilaria Fracasso2, Gabriele Baldan3, Antonella Dalle Zotte2, Giorgio Vallortigara1.
Abstract
Predispositions of newborn vertebrates to preferentially attend to living beings and learn about them are pervasive. Their disturbance (e.g. in neonates at risk for autism), may compromise the proper development of a social brain. The genetic bases of such predispositions are unknown. We use the well-known visual preferences of newly-hatched chicks (Gallus gallus) for the head/neck region of the hen to investigate the presence of segregating variation in the predispositions to approach a stuffed hen vs. a scrambled version of it. We compared the spontaneous preferences of three breeds maintained genetically isolated for at least eighteen years while identically raised. Visually-naïve chicks of all breeds (Padovana, Polverara and Robusta maculata) showed the same initial preference for the predisposed stimulus, suggesting that the direction of the initial preference might be genetically fixed. A few minutes later though, striking differences emerged between breeds, which could indicate different strategies of dealing with affiliative objects: while the Polverara breed maintained a constant preference across the entire test, the Padovana and Robusta breeds progressively explored the alternative stimulus more. We hence documented the presence of inherited genetic variability in the expression of early social predispositions in interaction with environmental stimuli.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28117411 PMCID: PMC5259780 DOI: 10.1038/srep40296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Pictures of the stimuli used: (A) Stuffed hen. (B) Scrambled hen (a stuffed hen whose parts were attached on the sides of a box in a scrambled order).
Figure 2(A) Hen preference across the entire 30 minutes of test by Breed, as: (distance to stuffed hen − distance to scrambled hen)/overall distance run. Boxplots show median and quartiles. (B) Hen preference by Breed in Time (every 5 minutes of test): means +/− standard error of the mean are plotted.
Figure 3(A) Motor activity (distance run in metres) across the entire 30 minutes of test by Breed. Boxplots show median and quartiles. (B) Relation between Motor activity and Hen preference by Breed.
Figure 4Chicks of the three investigated chicken breeds after the test, from the left: Polverara, Robusta and Padovana.