Sounding the alarm: sex differences in rat ultrasonic vocalizations during Pavlovian fear conditioning and extinction
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CC-BY-NC-4.0
Abstract
Pavlovian fear conditioning is a prevalent tool in the study of aversive learning, which is a key component of stress-related psychiatric disorders. Adult rats can exhibit various threat-related behaviors, including freezing, motor responses and ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs). While these responses can all signal aversion, we know little about how they relate to one another. Here we characterize USVs emitted by male and female rats during cued fear acquisition and extinction and assess the relationship between different threat-related behaviors. To probe the effects of aversive stimulus intensity, we exposed the rats to mild (0.3 mA), moderate (0.5 mA) or strong (1 mA) foot shocks. We found that males consistently emitted more alarm calls than females, and male alarm calls were more closely contingent on shock intensity than were female alarm calls. Furthermore, 25 % of males and 45 % of females did not emit alarm calls. Males that made alarm calls had significantly higher levels of freezing than males who did not, while no differences in freezing were observed between female alarm callers and non-callers. Alarm call emission was also affected by the predictability of the shock; when unpaired from a tone cue, both males and females started emitting alarm calls significantly later. Some rats continued to alarm-call during extinction learning (90% of males, 30% of females) and retrieval (65% of males, 20% of females). Collectively these data suggest sex-dependence in how behavioral readouts relate to innate and conditioned threat responses. Importantly, we suggest that the same behaviors can signal sex-dependent features of aversion. Significance statement Behavioral neuroscientists can access various outputs during behavioral tests to draw conclusions about internal states of animals. While freezing is the most common index of rodents feeling threatened, these animals also emit specific ultrasonic vocalizations during aversive situations. Here we record several motor and vocal behaviors to assess how they relate to each other as threat responses, and how such relationships vary across sex. We found robust differences in how much male and female rats engaged in so-called alarm vocalizations. These vocalizations were subject to extinction in both sexes, but correlated with freezing only in males. As the field advances to include more females in preclinical research, it is crucial that we understand how similar-appearing outputs may reflect sex-biased features.
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- europepmc
- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00
- unpaywall
- last seen: 2026-05-24T02:00:01.246996+00:00
License: CC-BY-NC-4.0