Developmental trajectory of social reward motivation from early adolescence into adulthood in female and male Long‐Evans rats

Author:

Murray Shealin H.1ORCID,Logan Ryanne J.2,Sheehan Andrew C.2,Paolone Arianna R.3,McCormick Cheryl M.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology Brock University St. Catharines Canada

2. Centre for Neuroscience Brock University St. Catharines Canada

3. Departments of Biological Sciences and Health Sciences Brock University St. Catharines Canada

Abstract

AbstractMost studies of adolescent and adult behavior involved one age group of each, whereas the dynamic changes in brain development suggest that there may be behavioral flux in adolescence. In two studies, we investigated developmental changes in social reward motivation in female and male Long‐Evans rats from prepuberty to early adulthood in a social operant conditioning task. Given the earlier onset of puberty in females than in males, we predicted the course of social reward development would differ between the sexes. Overall, the pattern of results from both studies suggests that the trajectory of social motivation across adolescence is characterized by upward and downward shifts that do not depend on the sex of the rats. During training, in both studies, the mean number of social gate openings and percentage of social gate openings was higher at P30 (prepubertal, early adolescence) and P50 (late adolescence) than at P40 (mid adolescence) and P70 (adulthood) irrespective of sex. Nevertheless, the specific age comparisons that were significant depended on the study. In both studies, P30 rats had greater levels of social motivation than did adults in accessing a social reward when increased effort was required (progressive ratio tests). In an extinction test, only P30 and P50 rats continued to show more nose‐pokes at the previously social gate than at the nonsocial gate, suggesting resistance to extinction. The results highlight the importance of characterizing behavior at several timepoints in adolescence to understand the neural mechanisms, many of which show similar discontinuities as they develop across adolescence.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

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