Thinking outside the conditioning box: ethological paradigms for studying fear, anxiety and risky decision-making in rodents

dc.contributor.advisorKim, Jeansok
dc.contributor.authorSchuessler, Bryan
dc.date.accessioned2022-07-14T22:15:47Z
dc.date.available2022-07-14T22:15:47Z
dc.date.issued2022-07-14
dc.date.submitted2022
dc.descriptionThesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2022
dc.description.abstractTraditional behavioral neuroscience paradigms assessing fear, anxiety and risky decision-making in rodents typically utilize restrictive environments that severely limit the animal’s behavioral repertoire. Additionally, such paradigms take a hyper-focused approach by studying few behavioral variables over brief periods, effectively producing “snapshots” of neurobehavioral phenomena. Finally, these paradigms largely ignore animals’ innate fear and anxiety-related behavior toward non pain-inducing environmental stimuli and instead commonly rely on conditioned stimuli to instigate defensive behavior. Ethological paradigms of fear, anxiety and risky decision-making, which seek to engender naturalistic scenarios within a laboratory setting, rectify many of these limitations by providing goal-directed tasks in more permissive environments, examining both innate and conditioned fear/anxiety-related behavior, studying the brain and behavior across a wider timescale and by studying many variables (a holistic approach). This dissertation presents specific experiments conducted in ethological paradigms of fear, anxiety and risky decision-making in both rats and mice that exemplify the utility and advantages of ethological paradigms as a whole. First introduced is the longitudinal, semi-naturalistic “Risky Closed Economy” paradigm (RCE). The first study details how the RCE can be used to comprehensively investigate the impact of chronic threat on day-to-day behavior in mice. The following study conducted in rats shows how the holistic approach afforded by the RCE can facilitate interpretation of nuclei function; specifically, it is shown that the lateral habenula participates in appetitive behavior involving natural reinforcers (food pellets) and not approach-avoidance conflict involving chronic, unpredictable threat. Lastly, the “Approach Food-Avoid Predator” paradigm (AFAP) is introduced; an ethological foraging paradigm that simulates predator-prey interaction. The final study covered shows how the AFAP produces a unique neural signature of fear and risky decision-making in mice relative to standard fear conditioning and innate fear paradigms lacking naturalistic approach-avoidance conflict.
dc.embargo.termsOpen Access
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherSchuessler_washington_0250E_24478.pdf
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1773/49120
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.rightsCC BY
dc.subjectEthology
dc.subjectNeurosciences
dc.subjectBehavioral psychology
dc.subjectPsychobiology
dc.subject.otherPsychology
dc.titleThinking outside the conditioning box: ethological paradigms for studying fear, anxiety and risky decision-making in rodents
dc.typeThesis

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