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Assessing behavioural and cognitive domains of autism spectrum disorders in rodents: current status and future perspectives

Journal

PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 231, Issue 6, Pages 1125-1146

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00213-013-3268-5

Keywords

Behaviour; Cognition; Animal model; Genetics; Phenotype

Funding

  1. Innovative Medicines Initiative [115300]
  2. European Union company
  3. EFPIA company
  4. Autism Speaks

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The establishment of robust and replicable behavioural testing paradigms with translational value for psychiatric diseases is a major step forward in developing and testing etiology-directed treatment for these complex disorders. Based on the existing literature, we have generated an inventory of applied rodent behavioural testing paradigms relevant to autism spectrum disorders (ASD). This inventory focused on previously used paradigms that assess behavioural domains that are affected in ASD, such as social interaction, social communication, repetitive behaviours and behavioural inflexibility, cognition as well as anxiety behaviour. A wide range of behavioural testing paradigms for rodents were identified. However, the level of face and construct validity is highly variable. The predictive validity of these paradigms is unknown, as etiology-directed treatments for ASD are currently not on the market. To optimise these studies, future efforts should address aspects of reproducibility and take into account data about the neurodevelopmental underpinnings and trajectory of ASD. In addition, with the increasing knowledge of processes underlying ASD, such as sensory information processes and synaptic plasticity, phenotyping efforts should include multi-level automated analysis of, for example, representative task-related behavioural and electrophysiological read-outs.

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