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Dive into the research topics where Susan A. Brunelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan A. Brunelli.


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 1994

Hypothermic vocalizations of rat pups (Rattus norvegicus) elicit and direct maternal search behavior

Susan A. Brunelli; Harry N. Shair; Myron A. Hofer

Emissions of ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) by rat pups (Rattus norvegicus) during hypothermia have consequences for recovery and warming. We investigated the effects on dam behavior of USVs emitted by 3- to 11-day-old pups during hypothermia at rectal temperatures between 18 and 22 degrees C. Rat dams were tested in a Y maze with the home cage as a start box. Dams were given, in one condition, a choice between a hypothermic pup emitting USVs or a hypothermic, silent (anesthetized) pup and, in the other, a choice between 2 hypothermic, silent pups. Although differing in some acoustic properties from normal isolation calls, USVs emitted by hypothermic pups both elicited maternal search behavior and acted as directional cues for dams, in comparisons with control dams exposed only to silent pups. Thus USVs of pups recovering from extreme hypothermia have communicative as well as physiological significance.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 1994

Reduction of rat pup ultrasonic vocalizations by the neuroactive steroid allopregnanolone

Betty Zimmerberg; Susan A. Brunelli; Myron A. Hofer

Several of the recently characterized neuroactive steroids have been proposed to have anxiolytic effects in behavioral models when subjects were tested as adults. In this experiment, the effects on infant subjects were examined using the isolation distress model of anxiety. The production of ultrasonic vocalizations in week-old rat pups after maternal separation was assessed after ICV injections of vehicle or allopregnanolone (1.25-5 micrograms), or sham injections. Subjects were also observed for activity and behavioral responses and tested on three measures of sedation. Allopregnanolone caused a dose-dependent decrease in ultrasonic vocalizations, with increasing motor incoordination, ataxia, and turning at the higher doses. Sex differences were not observed for any measure. These results suggest the GABAA receptor binding site for neuroactive steroids is behaviorally active in neonates as well as in adults, and that the anxiolytic effects of the neuroactive steroids at this site may be dissociable from their sedative effects at low doses.


Developmental Psychobiology | 1997

POTENTIATION AND INHIBITION OF ULTRASONIC VOCALIZATION OF RAT PUPS : REGULATION BY SOCIAL CUES

Harry N. Shair; Jenny R. Masmela; Susan A. Brunelli; Myron A. Hofer

Eight- and 11- to 12-day-old rat pups were tested in isolation and in the presence of an anesthetized adult under cold conditions. Pups of both ages reduced rates of ultrasonic vocalization (USV) when an adult was placed into the test cage, independent of whether the adult was their dam or an unrelated male. However, after removal of the dam, pups greatly increased their rates of USV over their first isolation period and in comparison with control pups. USV rates remained low after removal of the male. The temperature challenges faced by the pups in the two experimental conditions were the same. These phenomena are better explained by a hypothesis that postulates USV rate as being multiply determined, including by social cues, rather than a theory that considers thermal challenge only.


Developmental Psychobiology | 1998

The ontogeny of maternal potentiation of the infant rats' isolation call.

Myron A. Hofer; Jenny R. Masmela; Susan A. Brunelli; Harry N. Shair

Previous studies have shown that preweanling rat pups double or triple their rates of ultrasonic vocalization (USV) when isolated immediately after brief periods of maternal interaction (potentiation). We studied the ontogenetic pattern of USV and other behavioral responses of pups to 3-min periods of isolation in a novel test chamber, from 5 to 25 days postnatal age, before, during, and after 1 min or 5 min of interaction with an anesthetized or an active dam. USV potentiation did not develop until 7-9 days postnatal, a week after the initial isolation and maternal contact quieting responses were well established. Potentiation reached a peak at 13 days, and then declined until all USV responses ceased after 21 days. Other behavioral responses to isolation were not enhanced by maternal interaction at any age. The distinct ontogenetic pattern of this unusual response to maternal separation has implications for understanding its mode of development and possible adaptive value.


Physiology & Behavior | 1996

Elevated Plus-Maze Behavior in Adult Offspring of Selectively Bred Rats

Gabriel S. Dichter; Susan A. Brunelli; Myron A. Hofer

Animals sampled from the third generation (S3) of selective breeding of N:NIH strain rats based on ultrasonic vocalization (USV) rates in infancy (High, Low, and Random lines) were tested as adults on the elevated plus maze, a well-validated test of anxiety. Results showed that the Low line spent a greater percent of time in the open arms of the maze than High and Random (control) line animals, and a lower percent of time exploring from a relatively more protected position. There were no significant sex differences. The present study represents a probe into the processes at work during the early stages of selection for infant USV, and suggests that an adult measure of anxiety may be affected by selection for this infantile behavior.


Current protocols in protein science | 2002

Ultrasonic Vocalizations in Rat and Mouse Pups

Myron A. Hofer; Harry N. Shair; Susan A. Brunelli

The ultrasonic vocalization (USV), or isolation calling response, of infant rats and mice has been studied as a measure of the intensity of an aversive affective state and as an early communicative behavior between pup and mother. The four protocols described in this unit are for the basic isolation testing procedure, and for elicitation of the contact quieting response to littermates and/or dam, the potentiation of isolation calling response by a prior brief maternal interaction and the predator‐induced suppression of USV by the scent of an unfamiliar male. These procedures for the elicitation of USV, and for its regulation by different kinds of social interaction, provides the basis for experimental research on the early development of emotion and communication in an animal model system.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 1996

Maternal interactions prior to separation potentiate isolation-induced calling in rat pups.

Myron A. Hofer; Susan A. Brunelli; Jenny R. Masmela; Harry N. Shair

The vocal response rates of 12-13-day-old infant rats to isolation in a bare test box are markedly increased by brief (1-min) periods of contact with an anesthetized dam prior to isolation, without affecting other isolation-induced behaviors. No such potentiation followed brief contact with littermates, novel test conditions, or experimenter handling. Brief contact with the dam was equally effective in the test chamber or home cage and was not further enhanced by repeated contact-separation sequences. Passive contact became ineffective when prolonged to 30 min, and potentiation could not be restored by providing the additional reinforcing events of continuous suckling, periodic oxytocin-induced milk letdown, or bouts of simulated maternal licking. However, when pups engaged in active interaction with an awake dam, potentiation was significantly enhanced following 1-, 10-, and 30-min periods. A working hypothesis is outlined for the adaptive role of potentiation in the development of the rat pup.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2005

Differences in affective behaviors and hippocampal allopregnanolone levels in adult rats of lines selectively bred for infantile vocalizations.

Betty Zimmerberg; Susan A. Brunelli; Alyssa J. Fluty; Cheryl A. Frye

Allopregnanolone, 3 alpha-hydroxy-5 alpha-pregnan-20-one (3 alpha,5 alpha-THP), a progesterone metabolite, is an endogenous neurosteroid mediating affective behaviors via its positive modulation of GABA(A) receptors. In order to better understand the role of this neurosteroid in individual differences in affective behavior, we used an animal model based on selective breeding for an infantile affective trait, ultrasonic vocalizations (USV). Adult male and female (in either proestrus or diestrus) rats that had been bred for low (low line) or high (high line) rates of USV after maternal separation were tested in a series of affective behavioral tests: open field, emergence, social interaction, defensive freezing, and the Porsolt forced swim task. Concentrations of allopregnanolone in combined hippocampus and amygdala tissue were then measured. low line subjects showed significantly lower anxiety and depression responses in the emergence, open field, and Porsolt forced swim tasks than did high line subjects. Proestrus females exhibited less affective behaviors than diestrus females or males. Allopregnanolone levels in hippocampus/amygdala were significantly higher in low line subjects compared to high line subjects, and in proestrus females compared to diestrus females and males. These data indicate that: (1) affective behaviors in lines selectively bred for an infantile anxiety trait exhibit selection persistence into adulthood; and (2) levels of allopregnanolone in the limbic system parallel selected disparities in affective behavior, suggesting a selection for alterations in the neurosteroid/GABA(A) receptor system in these lines.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 1999

Behavioral mechanisms for active maternal potentiation of isolation calling in rat pups.

Myron A. Hofer; Jenny R. Masmela; Susan A. Brunelli; Harry N. Shair

The ultrasonic vocalization (USV) response of the isolated infant rat is a promising model for studying the neurobiology of an early anxiety state, and potentiation of the USV response after brief maternal encounters is a newly discovered behavioral regulator of this state. Using experimental variations in the contexts and patterns of maternal behavior during pup encounters and manual simulations of maternal behavior, we have identified several specific mother-pup interactions that cause potentiation. When one of these, pup carrying, was manually simulated, potentiation followed only if a characteristic postural transport response had been fully expressed by the pup. These behavioral mechanisms and other data suggest hypotheses for the development and adaptive role of maternal potentiation.


Physiology & Behavior | 2006

The effects of selective breeding for infant ultrasonic vocalizations on play behavior in juvenile rats

Susan A. Brunelli; Rui Nie; Clare Whipple; Vanessa Winiger; Myron A. Hofer; Betty Zimmerberg

For over 25 generations, two lines of rats (High and Low USV lines) have been selectively bred for extreme rates of infantile (45 kHz) ultrasonic vocalizations (USV) in response to maternal separation at postnatal day (P)10. High and low line juveniles (P30-P40) were socially isolated and allowed to play in same-sex sibling pairs for 10 min per day over three days. Measures of play were nape contacts and pinning. Other social and nonsocial behaviors were also scored during the three sessions; two of these, 55 kHz USV and walk-overs, were statistically associated with play. Compared to the Random control line, both High and Low line juveniles showed deficits in play behavior. In the High line, play initiatory behavior (nape contacts) was reduced, but pinning, USV and walk-overs were relatively unchanged. In contrast, nape contacts, pinning, USV and walk-overs were all reduced in Low line juveniles compared to Random line controls. The results suggest that selection for extremes of infant USV rates has produced temperamental differences that are expressed in juvenile play in the High and Low USV lines.

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