Grooming is a widespread behavior in the animal kingdom primarily geared towards the care of the body surface; nonetheless, other behavioral functions have been investigated and postulated. For example, rodents display high levels of grooming in contexts of potential threat, a fact usually interpreted as a sign of stress and anxiety. Conversely, new evidence suggests that during the process of habituation to novel and threatening contexts, particular sequences of grooming would act as a behavioral feedback facilitating emotional de-arousal. To test those opposing hypotheses about grooming interpretation, we assessed how testing contexts with different gradients of familiarity would affect exploratory activity and risk-assessment behaviors, ...
A regulação do comportamento de grooming nos roedores tem sido estudada em situações estressantes ou...
The temporal characteristics of grooming in an open field were studied in rats from two di...
The effects of stress upon emotionality, and of emotionality upon the open field activity of rats ha...
Grooming behaviour in rodents has been associated with emotional distress, especially in unfamiliar ...
We tested whether pharmacological impairment of OF-habituation after the administration (i.p.) of sc...
Grooming behavior has been reported to be a response to novelty and other stressors. However, studie...
Twenty seven experimentally naïve adult female rats were exposed to a novel arena with shelters for ...
In laboratory rats, one of the most used paradigms to assess habituation to novelty is the open-fiel...
In rodents, grooming is a complex and ethologically rich behavior, sensitive to stress and various g...
Exposure to novelty (preobservation transportation, injection, and novel environment) enhances the d...
Rats, like humans, show strong individual differences in their response to anxiogenic and stressful ...
Self-grooming is a complex innate behaviour with an evolutionarily conserved sequencing pattern and ...
Proceedings of the 9th International Multidisciplinary Conference «Stress and Behavior» ...
Increased anxiety is a classic effect of sleep deprivation. However, results regarding sleep depriva...
3 Phenotyping and genetics of rodent grooming and barbering: utility for experimental neuroscience r...
A regulação do comportamento de grooming nos roedores tem sido estudada em situações estressantes ou...
The temporal characteristics of grooming in an open field were studied in rats from two di...
The effects of stress upon emotionality, and of emotionality upon the open field activity of rats ha...
Grooming behaviour in rodents has been associated with emotional distress, especially in unfamiliar ...
We tested whether pharmacological impairment of OF-habituation after the administration (i.p.) of sc...
Grooming behavior has been reported to be a response to novelty and other stressors. However, studie...
Twenty seven experimentally naïve adult female rats were exposed to a novel arena with shelters for ...
In laboratory rats, one of the most used paradigms to assess habituation to novelty is the open-fiel...
In rodents, grooming is a complex and ethologically rich behavior, sensitive to stress and various g...
Exposure to novelty (preobservation transportation, injection, and novel environment) enhances the d...
Rats, like humans, show strong individual differences in their response to anxiogenic and stressful ...
Self-grooming is a complex innate behaviour with an evolutionarily conserved sequencing pattern and ...
Proceedings of the 9th International Multidisciplinary Conference «Stress and Behavior» ...
Increased anxiety is a classic effect of sleep deprivation. However, results regarding sleep depriva...
3 Phenotyping and genetics of rodent grooming and barbering: utility for experimental neuroscience r...
A regulação do comportamento de grooming nos roedores tem sido estudada em situações estressantes ou...
The temporal characteristics of grooming in an open field were studied in rats from two di...
The effects of stress upon emotionality, and of emotionality upon the open field activity of rats ha...