Group-housed laboratory mice are frequently found with their whiskers and facial hair removed. It has been proposed that dominant mice are responsible for barbering the hair of the recipient (the Dalila effect), and early studies suggest that the hair is removed by nibbling. In the present study, pairs of C57BL6 mice, composed of a barber and recipient, were separated to allow hair to regrow. The animals were then placed together in an observation box and their social behavior was videorecorded. The videorecording was subjected to frame-by-frame analysis. Barbering was found to occur during acts of mutual grooming. During grooming, one member of a mouse pair removed the vibrissae of the conspecific and did so by grasping individual whiskers...
Trichotillomania (TTM), or repetitive hair-plucking, is one of the most common disorders in women, y...
Patients with brain function disorders due to stroke or dementia may show inability to recognize the...
International audienceThe study of social interactions in mice is used as a model for normal and pat...
Barbering can be defined as an abnormal repetitive behavior in laboratory mice, where a barber mouse...
3 Phenotyping and genetics of rodent grooming and barbering: utility for experimental neuroscience r...
In 5 different mouse strains, we observed alopecic lesions most commonly in male breeding animals ke...
Among members of the family Muridae, the herb-field mouse, Apodemus microps, is unique in that aggre...
International audienceGrooming behaviour is the most common innate behaviour in animals. In rodents,...
Grooming behaviour is the most common innate behaviour in animals. In rodents, it consists of sequen...
Examples of video used to analyze grooming behaviour in mice unilaterally lesioned by 6-OHDA in the ...
raw data of scored barbering behavior observed in NOS2.KO mice, and the effect of pharmacological tr...
<p>A single systemic injection of SKF 83959 (1.5 mg/kg, sc) induced a significant elevation in the a...
The role of hair in swimming of laboratory mice: implications for behavioural studies in animal
<p>Grooming increased in response to surgery but C3H mice groomed less overall. The C57 mice showed ...
Animals display a range of innate social behaviors that play essential roles in survival and reprodu...
Trichotillomania (TTM), or repetitive hair-plucking, is one of the most common disorders in women, y...
Patients with brain function disorders due to stroke or dementia may show inability to recognize the...
International audienceThe study of social interactions in mice is used as a model for normal and pat...
Barbering can be defined as an abnormal repetitive behavior in laboratory mice, where a barber mouse...
3 Phenotyping and genetics of rodent grooming and barbering: utility for experimental neuroscience r...
In 5 different mouse strains, we observed alopecic lesions most commonly in male breeding animals ke...
Among members of the family Muridae, the herb-field mouse, Apodemus microps, is unique in that aggre...
International audienceGrooming behaviour is the most common innate behaviour in animals. In rodents,...
Grooming behaviour is the most common innate behaviour in animals. In rodents, it consists of sequen...
Examples of video used to analyze grooming behaviour in mice unilaterally lesioned by 6-OHDA in the ...
raw data of scored barbering behavior observed in NOS2.KO mice, and the effect of pharmacological tr...
<p>A single systemic injection of SKF 83959 (1.5 mg/kg, sc) induced a significant elevation in the a...
The role of hair in swimming of laboratory mice: implications for behavioural studies in animal
<p>Grooming increased in response to surgery but C3H mice groomed less overall. The C57 mice showed ...
Animals display a range of innate social behaviors that play essential roles in survival and reprodu...
Trichotillomania (TTM), or repetitive hair-plucking, is one of the most common disorders in women, y...
Patients with brain function disorders due to stroke or dementia may show inability to recognize the...
International audienceThe study of social interactions in mice is used as a model for normal and pat...