Melancholia

"Ich steh mit einem Fuß im Grabe"


(I am standing with one foot in the grave),

Friday, November 11, 2016

Rats are ticklish


Some worshiped Zeus, some Apollo, so what's the difference with worshiping a rat?

 

This article really intrigues me... the Zebra Finches we keep as pets have many vocalizations humans can't hear... I picture them giggling at the offer of some cheese... the Hindu Temples where they worship the rats must be a rodent laugh factory.

https://youtu.be/MsnAtVybZ84



Rats are ticklish


"In the midst of winter I finally learned that there was in me an invincible summer." - Alert Camus

Friday, November 11, 2016

Rats are ticklish


Photo published for Tickling rats can make them chuckle
 
Rats ARE ticklish - but they only 'laugh' when they are in a good mood

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3924300/Rats-ticklish-laugh-good-mood.html#v-7180138883129691345

How do you make a rat laugh? Just tickle it, say scientists (and if you don't believe them, watch their bizarre experiment)

  • Researchers found neurons in rat brains linked to ticklishness and laughter
  • When they stimulated these brain cells they made the animals chuckle
  • Rats were only found to enjoy the sensation if they were already happy 
  • The findings suggest the somatosensory cortex may play a role in mood

Associated with the plague and demonised in novels such as George Orwell's 1984, rats don’t have the best of reputations.
But the vilified rodents are known to giggle.
Now scientists have found that rats ‘enjoy’ being tickled – but only if they were already in a good mood.
Researchers at Humboldt University of Berlin identified neurons in rats’ brains linked to ticklishness and laughter and by stimulating them, were able to elicit a chuckle from the furry creatures.
The finding suggests the somatosensory cortex - the brain region where the neurons were located - may play some role in mood.
It was previously thought this brain region is primarily associated with the sense of touch.
The study, published in the journal Science, builds on previous work in which it was discovered tickling rats causes them to laugh at high frequencies that are inaudible to humans.
While tickling is easy to do, how the sensation reaches our brain is unclear.
Know any good jokes? Rats love to chuckle, according to a new study. Researchers captured footage of a rat emitting ultrasonic vocalisations when it was tickled (still pictured)
Know any good jokes? Rats love to chuckle, according to a new study. Researchers captured footage of a rat emitting ultrasonic vocalisations when it was tickled (still pictured)

To investigate, Shimpei Ishiyama and Michael Brecht monitored neuron activity in the rat somatosensory cortex before and during tickling.
They found that consistent with earlier claims that tickling is rewarding, the rats readily approached the tickling hand and performed ‘joy jumps’ as well as ultrasonic giggles when tickled.
The experts observed that neural firing rates in the deep layers of the somatosensory cortex increased along with laughter when the rats were tickled.
To test this correlation, they stimulated somatosensory cortex neurons when the rats were not being tickled, which they found also resulted in laughter.
However, when the rats were in an anxious mood – as a result of being placed on a high platform, for example - tickling-evoked laughter and neural firing were suppressed.
The authors believe their findings support Darwin's idea that ‘the mind must be in a pleasurable condition’ for ticklish laughter to occur.

'TWO MICE WALK INTO A BAR...': THE SCIENCE OF HOW RATS LAUGH

Researchers have found that rats laugh at high frequencies inaudible to humans
Researchers have found that rats laugh at high frequencies inaudible to humans
Laughing rodents may seem like a strange phenomenon, but researchers have found that rats laugh at high frequencies inaudible to humans.
Their 50-kHz ultrasonic calls, known as chirps, are distinct from the other noises they make, Scientific American reported.
Researcher Jaak Panksepp is thought to have been the first to discover that chirping can be compared to laughter in humans, by tickling rats,
He also found that the most ticklish rats - those that chirped the most - were also the most naturally playful and that laughter in young rats seems to increase bonding.
This is because in his experiments, young rats actively sought out a hand that had tickled them - presumably because the experience was enjoyable.
But he stopped short of asserting rats have a sense of humour, simply pointing out there seems to be similarities between laughter in children when they play and the same activity in rats. 

Source: 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3924300/Rats-ticklish-laugh-good-mood.html#v-7180138883129691345










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