Highlights
• Rats can learn the complex task of navigating a car to a desired goal
area.• Enriched environments enhance competency in a rodent driving task.
• Driving rats maintained an interest in the car through extinction.
• Tasks incorporating complex skill mastery are important for translational research.
ABSTRACT: Although rarely used, long-term behavioral training protocols
provide opportunities to shape complex skills in rodent laboratory
investigations that incorporate cognitive, motor, visuospatial and temporal
functions to achieve desired goals. In the current study, following preliminary
research establishing that rats could be taught to drive a rodent operated
vehicle (ROV) in a forward direction, as well as steer in more complex
navigational patterns, male rats housed in an enriched environment were exposed
to the rodent driving regime. Compared to standard-housed rats, enriched-housed
rats demonstrated more robust learning in driving performance and their
interest in the ROV persisted through extinction trials.
Dehydroepiandrosterone/corticosterone (DHEA/CORT) metabolite ratios in fecal
samples increased in accordance with training in all animals, suggesting that
driving training, regardless of housing group, enhanced markers of emotional
resilience. These results confirm the importance of enriched environments in
preparing animals to engage in complex behavioral tasks. Further, behavioral
models that include trained motor skills enable researchers to assess subtle
alterations in motivation and behavioral response patterns that are relevant
for translational research related to neurodegenerative disease and psychiatric
illness.
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