| dc.contributor.author | Korsós, Gabriella |  | 
| dc.contributor.author | Brown, Dan Lawrence |  | 
| dc.contributor.author | Windig-Zavadil, Christina |  | 
| dc.contributor.author | Rühlicke, Thomas |  | 
| dc.contributor.author | Fekete, Sándor György |  | 
| dc.date.accessioned | 2021-03-29T10:18:28Z |  | 
| dc.date.available | 2021-03-29T10:18:28Z |  | 
| dc.date.issued | 2016-12 |  | 
| dc.identifier.citation | Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja 138(12),743-752. (2016) | en_US | 
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10832/2829 |  | 
| dc.description.abstract | Summary
Background: The importance of acoustic stimuli plays a different role in the 
life of laboratory rodents. Too loud noise and/or vibration may be an important 
stressor, while a well-chosen background music may counteract these harmful 
effects.
Objectives: In this study the authors investigated the effect of music of Bach 
and Mozart on the behaviour of mice.
Materials and Methods: In the first trial twenty adult male (SPF, CD1) mice 
were placed by pair in cages and video and ultrasound (US) recording was made. 
After the basal ethogram Mozart and Bach music were applied in normal and 
“rodentized” versions (has been made by increasing the pitches to the hearing 
range of mice, 1-110kHz). In the second trial twelve male BALB/c mice were in vestigated using TiBeSplit open-field equipment (Figure 1–4) with human and 
rodentized music, and in silence as control.
Results and Discussion: First trial: during all sessions rearing get significantly 
more frequent and running time decreased (Table 1). No US voices were emitted 
by the mice. Second trial: During the music, the length of distance, the local 
and large movement, and the number of spontaneous changes of direction sig nificantly decreased (Table 2). On the contrary, resting time and time spent at 
the wall significantly increased under the influence of rodentized music. Taken 
together, the effect of rodentized music differs that of the human version and 
the genotype plays also a role. The basically calm CD1 mice got more active 
(more rearing, less running) and the more excitable BALB/c animals became less 
nervous owing to the musical stimuli. | en_US | 
| dc.language.iso | hu | en_US | 
| dc.publisher | Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja | en_US | 
| dc.title | Egéretológia: különböző emberi  és rodentizált zene hatása az  egerek társas és egyéni viselkedé sére, közérzetére és a genetika környezet kölcsönhatásra II. Eredeti és öt oktávval megemelt  Bach- és Mozart-zene hatása különbö ző genotípusú egerek viselkedé | en_US | 
| dc.title.alternative | Mouse Ethology: Effect of  different human and  rodentized music upon the  social and individual  behaviour, general feeling  and genetics-environment  interaction of mice II. Effect of original and five  octaves higher music of Bach and Mozart on the behaviour  of mice of different genotypes | en_US | 
| dc.type | Article | en_US | 
| dcterms.bibliographicCitation | Magyar Állatorvosok Lapja  138(12),743-752.(2016) |  |