A specific brain region regulates rats’ playful behavior

A specific brain region regulates rats’ playful behavior



Rats are ​extremely playful creatures.‌ They‌ love playing chase, and they literally jump for⁢ joy when tickled. Central to this playfulness, a new study finds, are cells in a specific region of rats’ brains.
The results give insight into a poorly understood ‍behavior, particularly in terms of how play​ is controlled in ⁢the⁢ brain. “There are prejudices that it’s childish and⁤ not⁤ important, ‍but play is an underrated behavior,” says Michael Brecht, a⁢ neuroscientist at⁤ Humboldt University in Berlin.
Scientists think play helps animals develop resilience. Some even‌ relate it to optimal functioning. “When ⁣you’re playing, you’re being⁤ your most creative, thoughtful, interactive self,” says Jeffrey Burgdorf, a neuroscientist at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., who was not involved⁣ in the new study. This is the opposite of depressive states, and Burgdorf’s own research aims to turn understanding the neuroscience of play‌ into new therapies for mood disorders.
For ⁤the ⁣new study, Brecht‍ and colleagues got rats used to lab life and being tickled and played⁤ with ​in a game of⁢ chase-the-hand. When rats play, they squeal with glee at a frequency of 50 kilohertz, which humans can’t hear. The​ researchers⁢ recorded these ultrasonic giggles as a way of ⁢measuring when the ⁣rats were having fun.

2023-07-28 10:00:00
Original from www.sciencenews.org

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