The squeak of a mouse tells most people to buy a mousetrap. But it tells
some researchers at lot more. According to a new study, mouse noises
indicate certain states of mind, and monitoring their sounds can help
scientists learn more about emotion, reward seeking and communication.



In addition to audible squeaks, mice produce ultrasonic noises-squeaks
so high that humans cannot hear them. Males sing a complex song during
sex and squeak when they are tickled, females chirp when around other
females, and mouse pups squeak when their mothers abandon them. These
vocalizations transform as the situation changes, too-male mice squeak
more frequently as they get closer to ejaculation, and female mice make
a ruckus when their female playmates have chocolate on their breath.
Scientists at the University of Toronto, Northwestern University and the
National Institutes of Health speculated that these noises and their
intensities were linked to the activation of dopamine, a brain chemical
involved in pleasure and reward seeking. They bred mice to lack certain
aspects of dopamine function and monitored the resulting din. Sure
enough, the dopamine-deprived mice were quieter on all counts,
suggesting that mouse squeaks relate both to the experience of pleasure
and to the desire for it.

The specially bred mice can teach scientists much about both mouse
behavior and the human brain. "Because mouse genes are so similar to
many human genes, it gives you a way of studying the genes for complex
behaviors," says John Yeomans, a psychologist at the University of
Toronto and the lead researcher of the study. Labs are already starting
to use mouse noises to study language to development, social bonding and
diseases that have symptoms related to communication including
Schizophrenia and autism.





Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
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