Exploring emotional contagion in zebrafish: A virtual-demonstrator study of positive and negative emotions

IF 1.3 4区 生物学 Q4 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Behavioural Processes Pub Date : 2023-11-01 DOI:10.1016/j.beproc.2023.104961
Daniel Burbano , Sahana Senthilkumar , M. Chiara Manzini
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Abstract

Emotional contagion, the transmission of emotions within a group, has been extensively studied in mammals but remains largely unexplored in fish. This study aims to investigate whether emotional contagion, specifically in terms of low and high anxiety levels, can be evoked in zebrafish. This freshwater species has been gaining momentum due to its high genetic homology to humans and complex behavioral repertoire, making it well-suited for exploring social behavior. Our hypothesis posits that zebrafish have the ability to transmit positive and negative emotions to one another through visual cues only and that this transmission is robust over time. To test this, we employed a virtual demonstrator fish approach, where videos of zebrafish exhibiting either high or low geotactic behavior were shown to live zebrafish. Geotaxis, the tendency of a fish to spend more time at the bottom of the tank, is a sensitive measure of anxiety, with high geotactic behavior corresponding to high anxiety levels and vice versa. Our findings indicate that the virtual demonstrator successfully transmitted emotional states to the live fish, as evidenced by changes in the time spent at the bottom of the tank, linear acceleration, and fast-turning maneuvers, metrics that quantify anxiety-like behaviors such as geotaxis and erratic movements. Additionally, we conducted a causal analysis using a transfer entropy approach, revealing a significant flow of information from the virtual demonstrator fish to the live fish, indicating the efficacy and potential of this approach in studying emotional contagion. This study provides additional empirical evidence of how visual cues alone from a virtual demonstrator exhibiting high or low anxious behavior can elicit similar behavioral states in bystander fish, highlighting the potential for emotional contagion beyond mammalian and avian models.

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探索斑马鱼的情绪传染:积极和消极情绪的虚拟演示研究。
情绪传染,即群体内情绪的传播,在哺乳动物身上已经得到了广泛的研究,但在鱼类身上仍然没有得到很大的探索。这项研究旨在调查斑马鱼是否会引发情绪传染,特别是低焦虑和高焦虑水平的情绪传染。这种淡水物种由于其与人类的高度基因同源性和复杂的行为谱系而获得了发展势头,非常适合探索社会行为。我们的假设认为,斑马鱼只有通过视觉线索才能将积极和消极的情绪相互传递,而且这种传递随着时间的推移是强大的。为了测试这一点,我们采用了一种虚拟示范鱼的方法,向活体斑马鱼展示了斑马鱼表现出高或低地理趋同性行为的视频。趋地性是一种鱼在底部呆更多时间的倾向,是衡量焦虑的敏感指标,高趋地性行为对应于高焦虑水平,反之亦然。我们的研究结果表明,虚拟演示者成功地将情绪状态传递给了活鱼,这一点可以通过在水箱底部停留的时间、线性加速度和快速转弯动作的变化来证明,这些指标可以量化类似焦虑的行为,如地轴和不稳定的动作。此外,我们使用转移熵方法进行了因果分析,揭示了从虚拟示范鱼到活鱼的显著信息流,表明了这种方法在研究情绪传染方面的有效性和潜力。这项研究提供了额外的经验证据,证明表现出高或低焦虑行为的虚拟演示者的视觉线索如何在旁观者鱼身上引发类似的行为状态,突出了哺乳动物和鸟类模型之外的情绪传染潜力。
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来源期刊
Behavioural Processes
Behavioural Processes 生物-动物学
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
7.70%
发文量
144
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Behavioural Processes is dedicated to the publication of high-quality original research on animal behaviour from any theoretical perspective. It welcomes contributions that consider animal behaviour from behavioural analytic, cognitive, ethological, ecological and evolutionary points of view. This list is not intended to be exhaustive, and papers that integrate theory and methodology across disciplines are particularly welcome.
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