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Rats Show Empathy And Altruistic Behavior, New Study Claims

  First Posted: 12/10/11 10:48 AM ET Updated: 12/10/11 10:48 AM ET

By Ferris Jabr
(Click here for original article.)

The English language is not especially kind to rats. We say we "smell a rat" when something doesn't feel right, refer to stressful competition as the "rat race," and scorn traitors who "rat on" friends. But rats don't deserve their bad rap. According to a new study in the December 9 issue of Science, rats are surprisingly selfless, consistently breaking friends out of cages -- even if freeing their buddies means having to share coveted chocolate. It seems that empathy and self-sacrifice have a greater evolutionary legacy than anyone expected.

In 2007 neuroscientist Peggy Mason of the University of Chicago wrote about the neurobiology of empathy for Scientific American. Inbal Ben-Ami Bartal, a new PhD student in integrative neuroscience who worked across the street from Mason in a different lab, saw the article and proposed a collaboration. "Scientific American really brought us together," Mason says.

In the new study, Mason and Bartal placed pairs of rats in Plexiglass pens. One rat was trapped in a cage in the middle of the pen, whereas the other rat was free to run around. Most free rats circled their imprisoned peer, gnawing at the cage and sticking their paws, noses and whiskers through any openings. After a week of trial and error, 23 of the 30 rats in the experiment learned to open the cage and free their peers by head-butting the cage door or leaning their full weight against the door until it tipped over. (The door could only be opened from the outside.) At first the rats were startled by the noise of the toppling door. Eventually, however, they stopped showing surprise, which suggests that they fully intended to push the door aside. Further, the rodents showed no interest in opening empty cages or in those containing toy rats, indicating that a break out was their genuine goal.

In this first set of experiments, most rats seemed quite willing to help their peers, but Mason wanted to give them a tougher test. She placed rats in a Plexiglass pen with two cages: in one was another rat, in the other was a pile of five milk chocolate chips -- a favorite snack of these particular rodents. The unrestricted rats could easily have eaten the chocolate themselves before freeing their peers or been so distracted by the sweets that they would neglect their imprisoned friends. Instead, most of the rats opened both cages and shared in the chocolate chip feast.

"In our lab we called it the 'chocolate versus pal' experiment," Mason says. "The rat could have put his butt in the opening of the cage containing chocolate to block the other guy, but he didn't. They were sharing food with their pals. In rat land, that is big—I was shocked." Mason says that free rats typically took the chocolate out of the cage before eating it and that sometimes the free rats placed the chocolate chips in front of or very near their recently sprung peers, "as if delivering it."

Mason's new study is one of the most recent in a series of experiments changing how scientists think about empathy and altruism in the animal kingdom. At first, most people agreed that true altruism was a uniquely human characteristic requiring an awareness of one's actions as selfless. Now it seems that many animals have evolved instincts to help others, even at a cost to themselves, and that we inherited these same instincts. "The bottom line is that helping an individual in distress is part of our biology," Mason says. "It's not something that develops or doesn't develop because of culture."

In earlier work, McGill University psychologist Jeffrey Mogil and his colleagues showed that mice recognize their peers' pain -- what researchers call "emotional contagion"—and spend more time with suffering cage mates. His team also developed a scale to measure pain expressed on the faces of mice.

Mogil was impressed with Mason's study, but had some questions about the findings. "This is surprising because it's not clear what the motivation for the prosocial behavior is, although the prosocial behavior is clearly there," says Mogil. Both Mogil and Mason point out that because trapped rats squeak out alarm calls now and then, which stress out any fellows that hear them, the rats opening the doors might be trying to silence their peers. Mason thinks the alarm calls aren't frequent enough to motivate the rats, but Mogil is not so sure.

In future research, Mason wants to investigate why some male rats never learned to break open their friends' cages. All six female rats in the first set of experiments figured out how to liberate their peers, but only 17 out of 24 male rats obliged. Mason's best guess is that some rats are paralyzed by alarm calls. Recognizing distress in another is not enough; the rats need to suppress their own panic before they can help. Mason cites research suggesting that females are generally more empathic than males as a possible explanation, but the findings are controversial.

Mogil says he plans to follow up the research as well. For starters, he is interested in whether another common lab animal -- the mouse—can learn to spring its peers, too. And he wants to perform the experiments with rodents that are strangers to one another, rather than ones that have been raised together.

In the last couple decades research on empathy and helping behaviors in animals has become more prevalent. "At first people were scared away from this research because they didn't want to be derided as anthropomorphic," Mogil says. "More and more evidence is coming along that all mammals can do this sort of thing. I think fear over the word anthropomorphism is starting to subside."

If anything, recent science shows us that we are not as guilty of endowing animals with uniquely human qualities as we are of failing to understand just how many qualities animals and people share.

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By Ferris Jabr (Click here for original article.) The English language is not especially kind to rats. We say we "smell a rat" when something doesn't feel right, refer to stressful competition as ...
By Ferris Jabr (Click here for original article.) The English language is not especially kind to rats. We say we "smell a rat" when something doesn't feel right, refer to stressful competition as ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MissFrijole
My bite is worse than my bark.
02:55 PM on 12/15/2011
Testing on animals is not right. The fact that they measure pain on mice is terrible! What is the point to all this research? What does it matter?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LabRat
Common sense ain't
01:16 PM on 12/14/2011
There has been anecdotal evidence of rat altruism for a long time. Pet rats have been reported to haul food or help feed an sick or injured pal.

It is good to see this actually has been studied in a more rigorous setting. Good study.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rabit818
12:34 AM on 12/13/2011
I suppose rats are much better than politicians.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RoughCollie
Destination: A new way of seeing things.
10:42 PM on 12/12/2011
"If anything, recent science shows us that we are not as guilty of endowing animals with uniquely human qualities as we are of failing to understand just how many qualities animals and people share."

Most pet owners already know this, it's the scientists who study the data rather than the actual animals who are catching up.
10:06 PM on 12/12/2011
not republican rats obvouilsy
07:23 PM on 12/12/2011
This is very cool!!!
03:25 PM on 12/12/2011
Why does everything have to be political?? Alot of these comments about them being better than Rep. Dem. its freaking ANNOYING!!! just say its cute cause they can acctually show emotion. ughhh
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ninjacb
not just another white dope on punk
12:37 PM on 12/12/2011
hmm. so the take away from this for me is that rats have more compassion than republicants. and appear to be smarter to boot.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fanny Lebowitz
10:56 AM on 12/12/2011
Rat's may be showing altruism, but what about the scientists....I wonder how exactly they were able to create a scale to show different measures of pain on a mouse face...
09:05 AM on 12/12/2011
How much did it cost to prove that rats share chocolate chips? I'm just wondering because someday soon someone is going to ask for a grant to study the fund-raising and philanthropical habits of the river otter.
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sillyfrog
Pastafarian and UU student
09:19 AM on 12/12/2011
I demand we all stay stupid.
06:54 AM on 12/12/2011
Humans and rats are the most adaptable and successful mammals on the planet, bar none. Apparently our capacity for empathy and altruism, coupled with social skills and curiosity, has served us well. Other animals, take note (if you haven't already).

That said, I do wonder about the result if the reward was something other than food. Unselfish food sharing is very common in the animal world. If the imprisoned rat was, say, a sexual competitor for a mate, would the box still be opened?

Do check out a book called "The Origins of Virtue" by Matt Ridley, for a closer look at these issues.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LabRat
Common sense ain't
06:44 PM on 12/14/2011
thanks for the recomendation
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mrsbean54
05:57 AM on 12/12/2011
Does this mean I'm expected to share my chocolate chips?
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dim
one in a can
08:32 PM on 12/12/2011
No, you are only human.
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Norge
Rolf K. Artist, worker of metal, writer of poems
05:14 AM on 12/12/2011
Incredible. Do they really need another study to prove the obvious. They have been around for a few million years raising countless generations of their own kind. Simple common sense dictates those organisms care for each other.
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dim
one in a can
08:35 PM on 12/12/2011
When our cosmic background radiation was discovered, common sense dictated it was pigeon poop on the antenna.
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01:55 AM on 12/12/2011
Rats behave better than humans. No surprize.
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SiameseTrainer
...we are Sia..mese if you don't please..
01:49 AM on 12/12/2011
Couldn't have been Amurrikan rats, they had to have imported those from someplace furrin and sos'list. My cat says those sos'list rats are a big danger, they co, co, co-operate, or some such silly idear as thet.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
see-ellen2001
09:44 PM on 12/12/2011
Yep. I heard them rats wanna set up free health care. Dang empathetic, caring creatures.