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Award details
Validation and refinement of cogntive bias-based techniques for assessment of affective state in animals.
Reference
BB/E012000/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor Melissa Bateson
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution
Newcastle University
Department
Sch of Biology
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
183,318
Status
Completed
Type
Research Grant
Start date
25/06/2007
End date
24/06/2009
Duration
24 months
Abstract
In humans, mood induced cognitive biases have been demonstrated in many tasks. Extending this idea to animals, a recent report showed that rats housed in conditions that induce symptoms of depression are more likely to be 'pessimistic' and classify an ambiguous stimulus as predicting a negative event. We aim to develop novel techniques based on such 'cognitive biases' for measuring affective state in animals, refining, extending and validating the limited previous work in this area. Our main innovation is to use tasks that tap into natural responses of animals that are likely to be faster to train than the operant techniques previously used. In our tasks, subjects are required to discriminate two stimuli associated with different outcomes. Next, their responses to un-reinforced intermediate stimuli are recorded. The resulting data are used to calculate the bias of the subject. Manipulations of the subjects' welfare that result in their being more likely to classify a stimulus as good (i.e. an optimistic bias) might suggest a positive affective state, whereas manipulations that result in their being less likely to classify a stimulus as good (i.e. a pessimistic bias) might suggest a negative affective state. We will develop two foraging tasks in which the stimuli are different coloured cardboard discs, and the outcomes are palatable (good outcome) and quinine-tainted mealworms (bad outcome) hidden underneath. We will use captive European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) as our model system, and will manipulate their affective state by changing the size of their cages and the level of environmental enrichment provided. We will use our cognitive bias tasks to measure changes in optimism caused by these different manipulations, and validate the cognitive bias measures by comparing them with other established measures of affective state including the frequency of abnormal behaviour patterns and stress hormone levels.
Summary
It would be useful to understand how animals feel. If we knew when they were frightened, bored or in pain it would be much easier to make them happier. Interpreting animals' emotions is a hard problem, because unlike humans they cannot report their feelings. Luckily, basic emotions are likely to be very similar in humans and animals because emotions serve a common function of protecting us. Engaging in activities that make us happy, like eating and sex, and avoiding situations in which we feel pain or fear will ensure that our genes survive to the next generation. The similarity of function between human and animal emotion suggests a common evolutionary origin, which in turn suggests that the biological mechanisms responsible for emotions are also likely to be shared. This similarity forms the basis of methods used for interpreting animal emotions. For example, if we know that happiness in humans is associated with a suite of behavioural, physiological and psychological features, such as smiling, low levels of stress hormones and optimism about the future, and we find a similar pattern in an animal, then it is probably a safe bet that this animal is happy. However, a word of caution is necessary here: evolution has tinkered with different species, and it is not safe to assume that every single indicator of happiness in humans will also be associated with happiness in another species; when a chimp gives a toothy 'smile', this is actually a threat display. For this reason, we should not depend on any single measure, but should use all available information when trying to interpret animals' emotions. We aim to develop new methods for measuring animal emotion based on findings in humans that our emotions affect our thinking. The 'head' and the 'heart' are often portrayed as rival beasts, but as we have seen above, emotion is likely to be vital for making good decisions. Indeed, research has confirmed that our emotions can significantly bias how we see the world,what we remember about it and the judgments we make. For example, a depressed person will interpret a glass as half empty, whereas a happy person will interpret the same glass as half full. Such phenomena are referred to by psychologists as 'cognitive biases'. We propose to use cognitive bias as a measure of animal emotion. We will do this by asking animals to classify neutral stimuli as either good or bad. We predict that if animals are happy then they are more likely to be optimistic about an ambiguous stimulus, whereas if they are sad or anxious they are more likely to be pessimistic. A technique like this has already produced some encouraging results in rats, and would like to extend these findings to a species of bird, the European starling. We want to devise cognitive bias tasks that are quick and easy to implement. We hope to do this by tapping into knowledge about the natural behaviour of birds. We will start by training starlings to remove a cardboard lid from a pot to retrieve a hidden worm. We will then teach the birds that one colour of lid (e.g. white) is associated with a tasty worm and another colour (e.g. black) is associated with a toxic, bitter-tasting worm. Once the starlings have learnt this discrimination we will challenge them with lids of intermediate shade of grey. We predict that the more optimistic a starling is feeling the higher will be the chance that it treats an ambiguous grey lid as predicting a tasty worm. We will investigate the emotional impact of different kinds of housing in our birds by comparing the cognitive bias of starlings in small bare cages, with that of birds in large cages enriched with perches and water baths. As well as developing behavioural techniques for measurement of cognitive bias, we also hope to arrive at specific recommendations for improvement in the housing of captive starlings.
Committee
Closed Committee - Animal Sciences (AS)
Research Topics
Animal Welfare, Neuroscience and Behaviour
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
X - not in an Initiative
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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