The China Mail - Rat race: What rodent drivers can teach us about mental health

USD -
AED 3.672499
AFN 65.49754
ALL 80.979656
AMD 377.215764
ANG 1.79008
AOA 917.000004
ARS 1404.088403
AUD 1.404485
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.702819
BAM 1.643792
BBD 2.01512
BDT 122.389289
BGN 1.67937
BHD 0.376978
BIF 2965.35987
BMD 1
BND 1.266678
BOB 6.913941
BRL 5.196498
BSD 1.0005
BTN 90.584735
BWP 13.12568
BYN 2.874337
BYR 19600
BZD 2.012178
CAD 1.351735
CDF 2209.999919
CHF 0.764798
CLF 0.02167
CLP 855.659814
CNY 6.91085
CNH 6.90741
COP 3667.46
CRC 495.12315
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 92.677576
CZK 20.33315
DJF 178.163649
DKK 6.26502
DOP 62.707755
DZD 129.419762
EGP 46.837801
ERN 15
ETB 155.312845
EUR 0.83859
FJD 2.18585
FKP 0.731875
GBP 0.731155
GEL 2.690116
GGP 0.731875
GHS 11.010531
GIP 0.731875
GMD 73.489005
GNF 8782.951828
GTQ 7.672912
GYD 209.326172
HKD 7.81475
HNL 26.438786
HRK 6.320599
HTG 131.239993
HUF 316.717502
IDR 16771
ILS 3.07635
IMP 0.731875
INR 90.548504
IQD 1310.634936
IRR 42125.000158
ISK 121.602337
JEP 0.731875
JMD 156.538256
JOD 0.708993
JPY 152.826501
KES 129.000162
KGS 87.450287
KHR 4032.593576
KMF 414.400398
KPW 899.999067
KRW 1451.015027
KWD 0.30687
KYD 0.833761
KZT 492.246531
LAK 21486.714209
LBP 89522.281894
LKR 309.580141
LRD 186.599091
LSL 15.938326
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.307756
MAD 9.121259
MDL 16.933027
MGA 4429.297238
MKD 51.733832
MMK 2099.913606
MNT 3568.190929
MOP 8.056446
MRU 39.329271
MUR 45.679578
MVR 15.449664
MWK 1734.822093
MXN 17.15845
MYR 3.925501
MZN 63.902223
NAD 15.938527
NGN 1355.459875
NIO 36.82116
NOK 9.477765
NPR 144.931312
NZD 1.64852
OMR 0.384493
PAB 1.000504
PEN 3.359612
PGK 4.2923
PHP 58.307499
PKR 279.886956
PLN 3.53654
PYG 6585.112687
QAR 3.647007
RON 4.269695
RSD 98.41699
RUB 77.42437
RWF 1460.743567
SAR 3.75085
SBD 8.058149
SCR 14.106202
SDG 601.497232
SEK 8.844315
SGD 1.261905
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.349869
SLL 20969.499267
SOS 571.774366
SRD 37.890414
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.59161
SVC 8.754376
SYP 11059.574895
SZL 15.922777
THB 31.039964
TJS 9.389882
TMT 3.51
TND 2.882406
TOP 2.40776
TRY 43.639504
TTD 6.786071
TWD 31.420303
TZS 2582.653999
UAH 43.08933
UGX 3556.990006
UYU 38.36876
UZS 12326.389618
VES 384.790411
VND 25944.5
VUV 119.366255
WST 2.707053
XAF 551.314711
XAG 0.012176
XAU 0.000198
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.803175
XDR 0.685659
XOF 551.314711
XPF 100.234491
YER 238.325026
ZAR 15.88361
ZMK 9001.198133
ZMW 19.034211
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.1070

    23.692

    +0.45%

  • NGG

    0.3700

    88.76

    +0.42%

  • RIO

    0.3900

    97.24

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    24.08

    +0.46%

  • RYCEF

    0.5300

    17.41

    +3.04%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    25.83

    +0.81%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    29.29

    -0.65%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    15.25

    -1.51%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    58.82

    -0.32%

  • BTI

    -0.9600

    60.19

    -1.59%

  • BCC

    0.7100

    89.73

    +0.79%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.78

    -0.23%

  • AZN

    5.3900

    193.4

    +2.79%

  • BP

    -2.2500

    36.97

    -6.09%

Rat race: What rodent drivers can teach us about mental health
Rat race: What rodent drivers can teach us about mental health / Photo: © AFP

Rat race: What rodent drivers can teach us about mental health

The girls can't hide their excitement as they're brought out to the racing arena.

Text size:

"Black Tail" is up first, taking a few seconds to sniff her surroundings before placing her paw on a lever and zooming away.

After storming to the finish line, she devours a well-earned Froot Loop hanging on a "treat tree."

Black Tail is one of the University of Richmond's rat drivers -- a group that first dazzled the world with their ability to operate tiny cars back in 2019.

Now, the rodents serve as ambassadors for the school's Behavioral Neuroscience Laboratory, headed by Professor Kelly Lambert.

"It gets people's attention about how clever and teachable these animals are," explained Lambert, who has to balance her affection for the furry speedsters with the need for scientific detachment -- naming them only by the Sharpie colors that mark their tails.

The idea of racing rodents started out as a playful challenge from a colleague.

But far from being a novelty act, the animals are part of a boundary-pushing project exploring the ways in which environmental enrichment sculpts the brain -- and could in turn hold potential for solving human mental health challenges.

For Lambert, one of the great failings of modern medicine has been its inability to cure mental illness through drugs, even as pharmaceutical companies have reaped in huge profits.

These pharmaceutical approaches have faced increasing scrutiny since a landmark study published in July questioned the theory that chemical imbalances, especially a lack of serotonin, cause depression.

- Froots of their labor -

Instead, Lambert sees behavior therapy as the key to treating the mind, which is where studying fellow mammals comes in.

"Our brains are changing, from the womb to the tomb," she said. "If we have some type of engaging life, this is probably important and related to depression."

A previous experiment of hers had split rats into groups of "workers," who were assigned an effort-based reward task of digging through dirt mounds for a Froot Loop -- or a control group of "trust fund" rats that were simply handed over treats.

When challenged with stressful tasks, the worker rats persisted longer than those conditioned to remain in a state of what psychologists call "learned helplessness."

And when tasked with swimming, the worker rats showed greater emotional resilience, as shown by a higher ratio of the hormone dehydroepiandrosterone to cortisol in their droppings.

Rats that learned to drive also had biomarkers of greater resilience and lowered stress -- which Lambert suggests might be linked to the satisfaction of acquiring a new skill, like a human mastering a new piano piece.

"They make pathways that they take over and over again in the wild, and we wanted to see if they could continue to have this great navigational skill in a vehicle," explained research lab specialist Olivia Harding.

Training wasn't simple: the team first tried having the rats nudge the driving control with their snouts, before finding the animals preferred to stand on their hind legs and use their front paws.

Early car models required the rats to touch wiring placed in the front, left or right of the car, completing a mild electric circuit that corresponded to movement direction.

Now, though, they get around in fancier rides with levers designed by a roboticist.

Even when their cars were placed in an unfamiliar spot, pointed away from the treat, the rats learned to turn their vehicles and navigate toward the reward, indicating advanced cognitive processing at work.

Today's driving ladies, Black Tail and Multicolored Tail, show clear signs of "anticipatory" behavior when humans enter the room, pacing back and forth and trying to climb their walls.

However, just like people, not all rats have similar interests: while certain individuals seemed eager to drive just for the fun of it, others did so just for treats, while still others couldn't be coaxed into participating at all.

- Into the wild -

Female rats in particular were long ignored by science, because earlier generations of researchers thought their four-day estrous cycles muddied research results.

This potentially deprived scientists of female-specific insights, a trend Lambert has been adamant to reverse in her experiments -- and is also now a required condition for federal grants.

Lambert recognized early in her career that studying rats living "non-enriched" lives inside cages without obstacle courses and activities was of limited use, akin to studying humans in solitary confinement.

In her driving study, rats raised in enriched cages fared far better at driving tasks.

Her most recent paper focused on differences between lab rats and those caught in the wild -- finding the latter had larger brains, more brain cells, larger spleens to fight disease, and much higher stress levels than their captive cousins.

"It kind of blows my mind" that there had been so little interest in understanding these differences, given their possible impact on human medicine, she said.

It also raises an intriguing philosophical question: are we more like the caged lab rats, the enriched-setting lab rats, or the wild rats?

"I'm feeling a little bit closer to the provisioned lab rat rather than the wild rat," muses Lambert.

But the wild rats, who have to scavenge for food and avoid predators every day of their lives -- much like our own ancestors -- might have something to teach us about mental resilience.

W.Tam--ThChM