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Prior Individual Training and Self-Organized Queuing during Group Emergency Escape of Mice from Water Pool

We study the impact of prior individual training during group emergency evacuation using mice that escape from an enclosed water pool to a dry platform via any of two possible exits. Experimenting with mice avoids serious ethical and legal issues that arise when dealing with unwitting human particip...

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Autores principales: Saloma, Caesar, Perez, Gay Jane, Gavile, Catherine Ann, Ick-Joson, Jacqueline Judith, Palmes-Saloma, Cynthia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4333824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25693170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118508
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author Saloma, Caesar
Perez, Gay Jane
Gavile, Catherine Ann
Ick-Joson, Jacqueline Judith
Palmes-Saloma, Cynthia
author_facet Saloma, Caesar
Perez, Gay Jane
Gavile, Catherine Ann
Ick-Joson, Jacqueline Judith
Palmes-Saloma, Cynthia
author_sort Saloma, Caesar
collection PubMed
description We study the impact of prior individual training during group emergency evacuation using mice that escape from an enclosed water pool to a dry platform via any of two possible exits. Experimenting with mice avoids serious ethical and legal issues that arise when dealing with unwitting human participants while minimizing concerns regarding the reliability of results obtained from simulated experiments using ‘actors’. First, mice were trained separately and their individual escape times measured over several trials. Mice learned quickly to swim towards an exit–they achieved their fastest escape times within the first four trials. The trained mice were then placed together in the pool and allowed to escape. No two mice were permitted in the pool beforehand and only one could pass through an exit opening at any given time. At first trial, groups of trained mice escaped seven and five times faster than their corresponding control groups of untrained mice at pool occupancy rate ρ of 11.9% and 4%, respectively. Faster evacuation happened because trained mice: (a) had better recognition of the available pool space and took shorter escape routes to an exit, (b) were less likely to form arches that blocked an exit opening, and (c) utilized the two exits efficiently without preference. Trained groups achieved continuous egress without an apparent leader-coordinator (self-organized queuing)—a collective behavior not experienced during individual training. Queuing was unobserved in untrained groups where mice were prone to wall seeking, aimless swimming and/or blind copying that produced circuitous escape routes, biased exit use and clogging. The experiments also reveal that faster and less costly group training at ρ = 4%, yielded an average individual escape time that is comparable with individualized training. However, group training in a more crowded pool (ρ = 11.9%) produced a longer average individual escape time.
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spelling pubmed-43338242015-02-24 Prior Individual Training and Self-Organized Queuing during Group Emergency Escape of Mice from Water Pool Saloma, Caesar Perez, Gay Jane Gavile, Catherine Ann Ick-Joson, Jacqueline Judith Palmes-Saloma, Cynthia PLoS One Research Article We study the impact of prior individual training during group emergency evacuation using mice that escape from an enclosed water pool to a dry platform via any of two possible exits. Experimenting with mice avoids serious ethical and legal issues that arise when dealing with unwitting human participants while minimizing concerns regarding the reliability of results obtained from simulated experiments using ‘actors’. First, mice were trained separately and their individual escape times measured over several trials. Mice learned quickly to swim towards an exit–they achieved their fastest escape times within the first four trials. The trained mice were then placed together in the pool and allowed to escape. No two mice were permitted in the pool beforehand and only one could pass through an exit opening at any given time. At first trial, groups of trained mice escaped seven and five times faster than their corresponding control groups of untrained mice at pool occupancy rate ρ of 11.9% and 4%, respectively. Faster evacuation happened because trained mice: (a) had better recognition of the available pool space and took shorter escape routes to an exit, (b) were less likely to form arches that blocked an exit opening, and (c) utilized the two exits efficiently without preference. Trained groups achieved continuous egress without an apparent leader-coordinator (self-organized queuing)—a collective behavior not experienced during individual training. Queuing was unobserved in untrained groups where mice were prone to wall seeking, aimless swimming and/or blind copying that produced circuitous escape routes, biased exit use and clogging. The experiments also reveal that faster and less costly group training at ρ = 4%, yielded an average individual escape time that is comparable with individualized training. However, group training in a more crowded pool (ρ = 11.9%) produced a longer average individual escape time. Public Library of Science 2015-02-18 /pmc/articles/PMC4333824/ /pubmed/25693170 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118508 Text en © 2015 Saloma et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Saloma, Caesar
Perez, Gay Jane
Gavile, Catherine Ann
Ick-Joson, Jacqueline Judith
Palmes-Saloma, Cynthia
Prior Individual Training and Self-Organized Queuing during Group Emergency Escape of Mice from Water Pool
title Prior Individual Training and Self-Organized Queuing during Group Emergency Escape of Mice from Water Pool
title_full Prior Individual Training and Self-Organized Queuing during Group Emergency Escape of Mice from Water Pool
title_fullStr Prior Individual Training and Self-Organized Queuing during Group Emergency Escape of Mice from Water Pool
title_full_unstemmed Prior Individual Training and Self-Organized Queuing during Group Emergency Escape of Mice from Water Pool
title_short Prior Individual Training and Self-Organized Queuing during Group Emergency Escape of Mice from Water Pool
title_sort prior individual training and self-organized queuing during group emergency escape of mice from water pool
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4333824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25693170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118508
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