Mice Exhibit Paramedic-Like Behavior: Neural Mechanisms Unveiled
2025-03-05

UCLA researchers have discovered that mice display prosocial behavior towards unresponsive conspecifics, characterized by intense head-directed grooming. This behavior is driven by an amygdala-regulated response. Experiments showed mice differentiating between sedated and stressed peers, grooming the head of sedated mice and the body of stressed ones. Neural recordings and optogenetic manipulation pinpointed the medial amygdala (MeA) as crucial; silencing MeA GABAergic neurons suppressed head grooming while activation enhanced it. This research illuminates the neural basis of prosocial behavior in mice, offering insights into broader animal social behaviors. This falls under the Tech category.
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prosocial behavior