The effect of 4-weeks exposure to music on social bonding between rats

Published: 01 Jan 2023, Last Modified: 06 Mar 2025EMBC 2023EveryoneRevisionsBibTeXCC BY-SA 4.0
Abstract: Interpersonal synchronization of movement induced by music is believed to facilitate social bonding between human beings, but it is unknown whether it also works in animals. We allowed rats to interact and develop social bonding with a specific subject for four weeks under one of the three acoustic conditions: playback of K.448 at its original tempo, playback at its double-tempo, and silence. The strength of social bonding between each pair of rats was then measured. The results showed an increase in preference for rats that had interacted under the original tempo playback compared to the other acoustic conditions. Considering that rats move in synchrony with the beat more robustly and consistently between subjects under the original tempo playback than under the double-tempo playback, this result suggests that motor synchronization between subjects through music may facilitate social bonding between rats.
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