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SCIENCE: Rats forsake chocolate to save a drowning companion

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    SCIENCE: Rats forsake chocolate to save a drowning companion

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    (In the Name of God, the Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful)

    Rats forsake chocolate to save a drowning companion
    By Emily Underwood May. 12, 2015, 5:15 PM

    We’ve all heard how rats will abandon a sinking ship. But will the rodents attempt to save their companions in the process? A new study shows that rats will, indeed, rescue their distressed pals from the drink—even when they’re offered chocolate instead. They’re also more likely to help when they’ve had an unpleasant swimming experience of their own, adding to growing evidence that the rodents feel empathy.

    Previous studies have shown that rats will lend distressed companions a helping paw, says Peggy Mason, a neurobiologist at the University of Chicago in Illinois who was not involved in the work. In a 2011 study, for example, Mason and colleagues showed that if a rat is trapped in a narrow plastic tube, its unrestrained cagemate will work on the latch until it figures out how to spring the trap. Skeptics, however, have suggested that the rodents help because they crave companionship—not because their fellow rodents were suffering.

    The new study, by researchers at the Kwansei Gakuin University in Japan, puts those doubts to rest, Mason says. For their test of altruistic behavior, the team devised an experimental box with two compartments divided by a transparent partition. On one side of the box, a rat was forced to swim in a pool of water, which it strongly disliked. Although not at risk of drowning—the animal could cling to a ledge—it did have to tread water for up to 5 minutes. The only way the rodent could escape its watery predicament was if a second rat—sitting safe and dry on a platform—pushed open a small round door separating the two sides, letting it climb onto dry land.

    Within a few days, the high-and-dry rats were regularly aiding their soaking companions by opening the door, the team reports online today in Animal Cognition. They did not open the door when the pool was dry, confirming that the rats were helping in response to others’ distress, rather than because they wanted company, Mason says. Rats that had previously been immersed learned how to save their cagemates much more quickly than those who had never been soaked, suggesting that empathy drove their behavior, she adds. “Not only does the rat recognize distress, but he is even more moved to act because he remembers being in that situation.”

    Next, the team put the rodents to the ultimate test, pitting chocolate against altruism. In this experiment, rats on the dry platform had to choose between two doors, one that allowed their soaked companion to escape from the pool and another that provided access to a tasty chocolate treat. The rodents chose to help their companions before seeking the snack 50% to 80% of the time, showing that the urge to help a fellow rat was at least as strong as the desire for food, the authors say.

    People differ from rats in many ways, but the study supports a growing body of evidence that there’s an evolutionary basis for helpful behavior, independent of culture or upbringing, Mason says. “Humans are not helping purely because mom taught us to help,” she says. “In part—and to what degree remains to be seen—we help because it’s in our biology.”
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    Re: SCIENCE: Rats forsake chocolate to save a drowning companion

    Wa alaykum assalam

    As someone who has spent a lot of time around animals, they're not senseless dumb creatures who feel nothing. Many times I've been taken aback by the apparent consideration and (dare I say) affection animals have for each other and even people they are familiar with.

    I'm not sure what the underlying mechanism would be, preservation of the species or whatever lol, but still, it is something which restores your faith in the idea of inherent compassion and mercy. It reminds me of that hadith:

    Narrated Abu Huraira (radi Allahu anhu): "I heard Allah's Apostle (sal Allahu alaihi wa sallam) saying, ‘Allah divided Mercy into one-hundred parts and kept ninety-nine parts of it with Him and sent down one part on earth. And because of that, its one single part, His creations are Merciful to each other, so that even the mare lifts up its hoofs away from its baby animal, lest it should trample on it.’" [Sahih Bukhari]


    Like, literally, there are two stray kittens in my area. One brown and one black, and the love they have for each other is just...they're always together.
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    SCIENCE: Rats forsake chocolate to save a drowning companion

    Ya Muqallib al-Quloob, Thabbit Qalbi Ala Deenik
    Oh turner of the Hearts make my heart firm on Your Deen


    islamb 1 - SCIENCE: Rats forsake chocolate to save a drowning companion



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    Re: SCIENCE: Rats forsake chocolate to save a drowning companion

    The kuffars need studies to prove what the believers already know. To believe all or even some creatures lack any feelings or intellect to some level is a very human-centric arrogance.
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