4.5 Article

Cancer blues? A promising judgment bias task indicates pessimism in nude mice with tumors

Journal

PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR
Volume 238, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2021.113465

Keywords

Laboratory mice; Judgment bias; Validation; Affective state; Animal welfare; Cancer

Funding

  1. NSERC Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (Canada) [05,828/145,607,139]
  2. National University of La Plata [11/V253]

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The study demonstrated construct validity for a novel mouse judgment bias test, which can be used to assess animal welfare and the impact of disease on affective states. Results showed that environmentally-enriched mice exhibited more 'optimistic' responses, while tumor-bearing mice displayed more pessimistic attitudes.
In humans, affective states can bias responses to ambiguous information: a phenomenon termed judgment bias (JB). Judgment biases have great potential for assessing affective states in animals, in both animal welfare and biomedical research. New animal JB tasks require construct validation, but for laboratory mice (Mus musculus), the most common research vertebrate, a valid JB task has proved elusive. Here (Experiment 1), we demonstrate construct validity for a novel mouse JB test: an olfactory Go/Go task in which subjects dig for high- or low-value food rewards. In C57BL/6 and Balb/c mice faced with ambiguous cues, latencies to dig were sensitive to high/ low welfare housing: environmentally-enriched animals responded with relative 'optimism' through shorter latencies. Illustrating the versatility of this validated JB task across different fields of research, it further allowed us to test hypotheses about the mood-altering effects of cancer in male and female nude mice (Experiment 2). Males, although not females, treated ambiguous cues as intermediate; and males bearing subcutaneous lung adenocarcinomas also responded more pessimistically to these than did healthy controls. To our knowledge, this is the first evidence of a valid mouse JB task, and the first demonstration of pessimism in tumor-bearing animals. This task still needs to be refined to improve its sensitivity. However, it has great potential for investigating mouse welfare, the links between affective state and disease, depression-like states in animals, and hypotheses regarding the neurobiological mechanisms that underlie affect-mediated biases in judgment.

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