Social isolation biases female rats toward safety-oriented, efficient foraging

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Social isolation has profound effects on behavior and cognition, but these effects can differ across sex and behavioral domains. We asked how social isolation shapes foraging decisions in male and female rats using a patch-leaving task that combines spatial navigation with sequential stay-or-go choices across varying travel costs and reward depletion rates. All groups scaled patch residence times with travel cost in a manner consistent with the marginal value theorem yet consistently overstayed beyond the optimal leaving time. The magnitude of overstaying was shaped by a strong interaction between sex and social status, with socially isolated females leaving patches closest to optimal and consuming food at the highest rate. Their foraging was accompanied by a coherent spatial and behavioral profile where the socially isolated females spent more time idle, preferentially occupying protected regions near the door and corridor, and avoiding the exposed patch center during both active foraging and periods of idling. These patterns are consistent with a conservative, safety-oriented strategy that simultaneously minimizes exposure and maximizes caloric return. Social isolation does not uniformly impair cognition but can selectively bias female rats toward efficiency-maximizing foraging decisions, consistent with the ecological pressures faced by outcast females in wild rat colonies.

Article activity feed