| Literature DB >> 28298887 |
Nikolas A Francis1, Patrick O Kanold1.
Abstract
Recent advances in neuroimaging and genetics have made mice an advantageous animal model for studying the neurophysiology of sensation, cognition, and locomotion. A key benefit of mice is that they provide a large population of test subjects for behavioral screening. Reflex-based assays of hearing in mice, such as the widely used acoustic startle response, are less accurate than operant conditioning in measuring auditory processing. To date, however, there are few cost-effective options for scalable operant conditioning systems. Here, we describe a new system for automated operant conditioning, the Psibox. It is assembled from low cost parts, designed to fit within typical commercial wire-top cages, and allows large numbers of mice to train independently in their home cages on positive reinforcement tasks. We found that groups of mice trained together learned to accurately detect sounds within 2 weeks of training. In addition, individual mice isolated from groups also showed good task performance. The Psibox facilitates high-throughput testing of sensory, motor, and cognitive skills in mice, and provides a readily available animal population for studies ranging from experience-dependent neural plasticity to rodent models of mental disorders.Entities:
Keywords: auditory; automated; behavior; conditioning; group; mouse; operant; scalable
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28298887 PMCID: PMC5331059 DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2017.00010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neural Circuits ISSN: 1662-5110 Impact factor: 3.342
Figure 1The Psibox: an automated operant conditioning system. (A) Schematic of training components. (B) Auditory task performance in groups (left) and for isolated individual mice that were trained in groups (right). The top row shows the probability of a lick occurring at a given time during a trial (i.e., the “lick rate”). Each color line in the top row indicates a different cage (left) or mouse (right). Solid and dotted lines indicate responses during tone and catch trials, respectively. Catch trials were interleaved with stimulus trials, and used to estimate false alarms. The bottom row shows the first-lick latency distribution collapsed across cages (left) and isolated individuals (right). The green area indicates when the tone was presented during a trial. The gray area shows the behavioral response time-window. Licks during the response time-window were rewarded with water. Licks before the response time-window were punished with a time-out.
Figure 2Task Acquisition. (A) Daily measurements of peak first-lick latencies (black) and the required response delay (blue) on a given day, averaged across cages. Shading shows 1 standard deviation. Each cage progressed at a slightly different rate, so some cages required different response delays on the same day. (B) Same as in (A), but for hit (red), early (green), and false alarm (blue) rates.