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Olfactory investigation in the home cage
•Mice freely sample odors from ports in their home cages hundreds of times per day.•Sampling rate increases by an odor of magnitude in response to an unexpected odor.•Increased sampling lasts for 24 h following introduction of an unexpected odor. We have developed a behavioral paradigm to study voli...
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Published in: | Neurobiology of learning and memory 2024-09, Vol.213, p.107951, Article 107951 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •Mice freely sample odors from ports in their home cages hundreds of times per day.•Sampling rate increases by an odor of magnitude in response to an unexpected odor.•Increased sampling lasts for 24 h following introduction of an unexpected odor.
We have developed a behavioral paradigm to study volitional olfactory investigation in mice over several months. We placed odor ports in the wall of a standard cage that administer a neutral odorant stimulus when a mouse pokes its nose inside. Even though animals were fed and watered ad libitum, and sampling from the port elicited no outcome other than the delivery of an odor, mice readily sampled these stimuli hundreds of times per day. This self-paced olfactory investigation persisted for weeks with only modest habituation following the first day of exposure to a given set of odorants. If an unexpected odorant stimulus was administered at the port, the sampling rate increased transiently (in the first 20 min) by an order of magnitude and remained higher than baseline throughout the subsequent day, indicating learned implicit knowledge. Thus, this system may be used to study naturalistic olfactory learning over extended time scales outside of conventional task structures. |
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ISSN: | 1074-7427 1095-9564 1095-9564 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.nlm.2024.107951 |