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by mattkrause 2384 days ago
That description of the experiment isn’t correct. They’re not using predator calls or anything to induce depression.

Instead, the readout is how long the mouse spends scrambling to escape vs. floating immobile in the water, usually after a “training run” that demonstrates to it that it can’t escape. You can draw some vague parallel to “coping with adversity”, but the test’s value is mostly that historically, it has predicted drugs that seem to help human patients with depression: mice receiving anti-depressants tend to spend less time immobile.

1 comments

Ah, okay, that makes sense, thank you for clearing up my confusion. Basically, they're looking for the most effective substances to boost activity, which is one of the things that anti-depressants are supposed to help with.
It’s more that substances boosting activity also help with depression: nobody really knows the causal direction, or even if there really is one.

That said, one way to botch these assays is to do something that just directly increases locomotion. They did look at that in Table 1 though.