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Dive into the research topics where Agathe Laurence is active.

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Featured researches published by Agathe Laurence.


Laterality | 2011

Task complexity, posture, age, sex: Which is the main factor influencing manual laterality in captive Cercocebus torquatus torquatus?

Agathe Laurence; Catherine Wallez; Catherine Blois-Heulin

Behavioural asymmetries reflect brain asymmetry in nonhuman primates (NHP) as in humans. By investigating manual laterality, researchers can study the evolution of brain hemisphere specialisation. Three dominant theories aim to establish an evolutionary scenario. The most recent theory relates different levels of manual laterality to task complexity. Our investigation aimed to evaluate the importance of two extrinsic factors (posture and the need for manual coordination) and two intrinsic factors (age and sex) on the expression of manual laterality by red-capped mangabeys. We observed 19 captive-born mangabeys, in spontaneous situations and under experimental conditions (seven experimental tasks varying in complexity). No directionality was observed in hand preference at the group level whatever the task. But our data revealed an effect of task complexity: more subjects were lateralised than not lateralised for the bipedal task and for the three most complex tasks. Finally, we evidenced an age and a sex effect. We compare our results with data for several other primate species and discuss them in the light of different manual laterality theories.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Japanese Quail’s Genetic Background Modulates Effects of Chronic Stress on Emotional Reactivity but Not Spatial Learning

Agathe Laurence; Cécilia Houdelier; Christophe Petton; Ludovic Calandreau; Cécile Arnould; Angélique Favreau-Peigné; Christine Leterrier; Alain Boissy; Marie-Annick Richard-Yris; Sophie Lumineau

Chronic stress is known to enhance mammals’ emotional reactivity and alters several of their cognitive functions, especially spatial learning. Few studies have investigated such effects in birds. We investigated the impact of a two-week stress on Japanese quail’s emotional reactivity and spatial learning. Quail is an avian model widely used in laboratory studies and for extrapolation of data to other poultry species. As sensitivity to chronic stress can be modulated by intrinsic factors, we tested juvenile female Japanese quail from three lines, two of them divergently selected on tonic immobility duration, an indicator of general fearfulness. The different emotional reactivity levels of quail belonging to these lines can be revealed by a large variety of tests. Half of the birds were submitted to repeated unpredictable aversive events for two weeks, whereas the other half were left undisturbed. After this procedure, two tests (open field and emergence tests) evaluated the emotional reactivity of treated and control quails. They were then trained in a T-maze for seven days and their spatial learning was tested. The chronic stress protocol had an impact on resting, preening and foraging in the home cage. As predicted, the emotional reactivity of treated quails, especially those selected for long tonic immobility duration, was higher. Our spatial learning data showed that the treatment enhanced acquisition but not memorization. However, intrinsic fearfulness did not seem to interact with the treatment in this test. According to an inverted U-shaped relationship between stress and cognition, chronic stress can improve the adaptability of birds to a stressful environment. We discussed the mechanisms possibly implied in the increase of emotional reactivity and spatial abilities.


Animal Cognition | 2012

Hand preference and its flexibility according to the position of the object: a study in cercopithecines examining spontaneous behaviour and an experimental task (the Bishop QHP task)

Amandine Chapelain; Agathe Laurence; Marie Vimond; Audrey Maille; Hélène Meunier; Jacqueline Fagard; Jacques Vauclair; Catherine Blois-Heulin

The extant literature on manual laterality in non-human primates is inconclusive, plagued by inconsistent or contradictory findings and by disturbing methodological issues (e.g. uncontrolled influential factors, comparability issues). The present study examined hand preference and its flexibility in 15 red-capped mangabeys (C. t. torquatus) and 13 Campbell’s monkeys (C. c. campbelli), two species that differ in their degree of arboreality. We investigated the influence of the spatial position of the object on hand preference for reaching. We considered spontaneous behaviour (reaching for food during daily feeding) and an experimental task: the QHP task. The QHP is a task that is used in humans. This is a simple reaching task that involves high spatial constraints on hand use. In our study, the subject had to reach for items that were placed on a semi-circle in front of it on five positions, including in the centre position, in the ipsilateral space and in the contralateral space. We assessed hand preference for reaching in front (baseline condition), and we examined how this preference changed when reaching in lateral positions. For reaching in front, about half of the subjects were lateralized and no group-level bias occurred, for both spontaneous and experimental conditions. When considering reaching in the lateral positions, we observed that the position of the object influenced hand use: individuals used the hand that was closest to the object. The results are discussed in relation to previous findings in humans and in non-human primates and regarding theories on handedness and flexibility of hand preference.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Emotionality Modulates the Effect of Chronic Stress on Feeding Behaviour in Birds

Angélique Favreau-Peigné; Ludovic Calandreau; Paul Constantin; Bernard Gaultier; Aline Bertin; Cécile Arnould; Agathe Laurence; Marie-Annick Richard-Yris; Cécilia Houdelier; Sophie Lumineau; Alain Boissy; Christine Leterrier

Chronic stress is a long-lasting negative emotional state that induces negative consequences on animals’ psycho-physiological state. This study aimed at assessing whether unpredictable and repeated negative stimuli (URNS) influence feeding behaviour in quail. Sixty-four quail were exposed to URNS from day 17 to 40, while 64 quail were undisturbed. Two lines divergently selected on their inherent emotionality were used to assess the effect of genetic factors on the sensitivity to URNS. All quail were submitted to a sequential feeding procedure (using two diets of different energetic values) which placed them in a contrasting situation. Behavioural tests were performed to assess the emotional reactivity of the two lines. Results confirmed that differences exist between them and that their emotional reactivity was enhanced by URNS. Diet preferences, motivation and daily intake were also measured. URNS did not change the preferences for the hypercaloric diet compared to the hypocaloric diet in choice tests, but they reduced daily intakes in both lines. Motivations for each diet were differently affected by URNS: they decreased the motivation to eat the hypercaloric diet in quail selected for their low inherent fearfulness whereas they increased the motivation to eat the hypocaloric diet in quail selected for their high inherent fearfulness, which suggested a devaluation process in the former and a compensatory behaviour in the later. Growth was furthermore reduced and laying delayed by URNS in both lines. In conclusion, the exposure to URNS induced interesting changes in feeding behaviour added with an increase in emotional reactivity and an alteration of production parameters. This confirms that both lines of quail experienced a chronic stress state. However differences in feed motivation and emotional reactivity between lines under chronic stress suggested that they experienced different emotional state and use different ways to cope with it depending on their genetic background.


48th Congress of the International Society for Applied Ethology | 2014

Bird's emotionality modulates the impact of chronic stress on feeding behaviour

Angélique Favreau-Peigné; Ludovic Calandreau; Bernard Gaultier; Paul Constantin; Aline Bertin; Cécile Arnould; Frédéric Mercerand; Alain Boissy; Agathe Laurence; Sophie Lumineau; Cécilia Houdelier; Marie-Annick Richard-Yris; Christine Leterrier

Chronic stress is a long-lasting negative emotional state which induces negative consequences on animals’ behavior. This study aimed at assessing whether unpredictable and repeated negative stimuli (URNS) influence feeding behavior in quail, and whether this can be modulated by their emotionality. Two lines of quail divergently selected on their inherent emotionality (low emotionality, STI; high emotionality, LTI) were either daily exposed to URNS or undisturbed from 17 to 40 days of age (n=32 for each line, in each group). During this time, quail were submitted twice to a sequential feeding procedure: they were offered a hypocaloric diet (7% less caloric than the normocaloric diet) on odd days and a hypercaloric diet (7% more caloric) on even days, for 8 days; then, they received a normocaloric diet (metabolizable energy=12.56 MJ) for 3 days. This sequential feeding procedure was used to assess anhedonia and diet preferences thanks to choice tests (hypo vs. hypercaloric diets) performed at the end of each period. Short-term (30 min) and daily intake were also measured each day. Behavioral tests were performed to assess quail’s emotional reactivity. Results showed that URNS enhanced quails’ emotional reactivity, e.g. in the reactivity to human test, disturbed quail came later (P=0.011) and spent less time (P 0.1), but URNS reduced their daily intake during the 2nd period (P<0.05). Motivation for each diet (assessed by their short-term intake) was differently affected by URNS during the 2nd period: STI quail decreased their motivation to eat the hypercaloric diet (P<0.01) whereas LTI increased their motivation to eat the hypocaloric diet (P<0.01). In conclusion, both lines of quail experienced a chronic stress as URNS induced an increase of their emotional reactivity. Interestingly, URNS induced opposite changes in quail’s feeding behavior: LTI disturbed quail seemed to express a short-term compensatory behavior because of their high motivation to eat, whereas STI disturbed quail seemed to be in a devaluation process as shown by their anhedonia and their decrease of daily intake.Farm animals have to adapt to human presence from birth and being handled may lead to fear and stress reactions. It is known that the mother can be used as a postnatal model in the development of young-human relationship. Through her, some information like auditory ones may even be learnt prenatally. We tested this idea in pigs because they communicate a lot by acoustic signals. The hypotheses were that prenatal experience with human voice could modify behavioural reactions to the experienced voice and to an unfamiliar voice expressing different emotions. We worked with 30 pregnant sows from the last month of gestation. Ten sows (treatment A) were submitted to recordings of human voices during handling: vA during positive interactions and vB during negative interactions, twice a day, 5 days a week, for 10 minutes. Ten other sows (treatment B) received the contrary, i.e. vB during positive interactions and vA during negative interactions. Ten last sows (treatment C) received no vocal stimulations during handling sessions. Two days old piglets (36 A, 39 B, 35 C) were submitted to a 5 min choice test between voices vA and vB in a testing pen (2×1 m). Each voice was played back through loudspeakers positioned at each end of the pen. At 15-18 days of age, 20 other piglets from each treatment were tested in the same conditions except that we played back the voice of an unknown person, reading the same text with a joyful or angry intention. In both tests we recorded vocalisations and locomotion. Data were analysed using non parametric statistics (Statview). In both tests, A and B piglets started to move sooner (P 0.05) to be and the time spent (178 s (46s)) close to the loudspeakers did not depend on the treatment (P>0.05). We also found no difference between the time spent close to one loudspeaker or the other, neither for vA versus vB, nor for joyful versus angry intention (P>0.05). The results show that the prenatal experience of human voice reduces postnatal behavioural reactions of stress (vocalisations, latency to move) during the playback human voices. However, it does not seem to induce specific attraction toward human voice, or human emotional intention. Therefore prenatal experience with human voice may be a good way of reducing fear reactions to human voice after birth.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Short- and long-term effects of unpredictable repeated negative stimuli on Japanese quail's fear of humans

Agathe Laurence; Sophie Lumineau; Ludovic Calandreau; Cécile Arnould; Christine Leterrier; Alain Boissy; Cécilia Houdelier


Séminaire du réseau AgriBEA | 2013

Le projet EmoFarm : une approche expérimentale de la relation entre émotions et bien-être.

Cécile Arnould; Catherine Belzung; Xavier Boivin; Ludovic Calandreau; Elodie Chaillou-Sagon; Marjorie Coulon; Véronique Deiss; Alexandra Destrez; Angélique Favreau-Peigné; Cécilia Houdelier; Agathe Laurence; Christine Leterrier; Frédéric Lévy; Sophie Lumineau; Raymond Nowak


5. Journées d'Animation Scientifique du département Phase (JAS Phase 2013) | 2013

Une expérience négative dans le jeune âge modifie la sensibilité émotionnelle de l’animal, ses capacités cognitives et ses compétences sociales

Alain Boissy; Christine Leterrier; Sophie Lumineau; Catherine Belzung; Alexandra Destrez; Véronique Deiss; Xavier Boivin; Raymond Nowak; Angélique Favreau-Peigné; Ludovic Calandreau; Elodie Chaillou-Sagon; Laurence A. Guilloteau; Cécile Arnould; Frédéric Lévy; Agathe Laurence; Cécilia Houdelier


Symposium “Lateralization, praxis and communicative gestures: A comparative and developmental approach” | 2012

What the Bishop QHP task can tell us about manual laterality of guenons and mangabeys

Amandine Chapelain; Audrey Maille; Agathe Laurence; Catherine Blois-Heulin


Frontiers in Stress and Cognition: From Molecules to Behavior | 2012

Impact of individual trait for emotionality on behavioural, physiological and neurobiological consequences of chronic stress in birds

Elodie Chaillou-Sagon; Cécile Arnould; Angélique Favreau-Peigné; Aline Bertin; Paul Constantin; Sophie Lumineau; Cécilia Houdelier; Agathe Laurence; Alain Boissy; Christine Leterrier; Ludovic Calandreau

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Christine Leterrier

François Rabelais University

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Cécile Arnould

François Rabelais University

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Ludovic Calandreau

François Rabelais University

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Angélique Favreau-Peigné

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Aline Bertin

François Rabelais University

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