» Articles » PMID: 9710457

Voluntary Wheel Running: a Review and Novel Interpretation

Overview
Journal Anim Behav
Date 1998 Dec 16
PMID 9710457
Citations 133
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Voluntary wheel running by animals is an activity that has been observed and recorded in great detail for almost a century. This review shows that it is performed, often with startling intensity and coordination, by a wide variety of wild, laboratory and domestic species with diverse evolutionary histories. However, despite the plethora of published studies on wheel running, there is considerable disagreement between many findings, thus leading to a lack of consensus on explanations of the causality and function. In the initial part of this review, I discuss the internal and external factors that may be involved in the causality of this behaviour, with an emphasis on disparities in both the factual and theoretical development of the subject. I then address the various proposed functions of wheel running, again highlighting evidence to the contrary. This leads to the conclusion that any single theory on the basis of wheel running is likely to be simplistic with little generality. I then present a novel, behaviour-based interpretation in which it is argued that wheel running has no directly analogous naturally occurring behaviour, it is (sometimes) performed for its own sake per se rather than as a redirected or substitute activity, and studies on motivation show that wheel running is self-reinforcing and perceived by animals as 'important'. This review proposes that wheel running may be an artefact of captive environments or of the running-wheel itself, possibly resulting from feedback dysfunction. I also discuss the ubiquity and intensity of its performance, along with its great plasticity and maladaptiveness, all indicating that if it is an artefact, it is nevertheless one of great interest to behavioural science. Copyright 1998 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.

Citing Articles

Breeding fat-tailed dunnarts (Sminthopsis crassicaudata) in captivity: Revised practices to minimize stress whilst maintaining considerations of wild biology.

Scicluna E, Newton A, Hutchison J, Dimovski A, Fanson K, DSouza G Dev Dyn. 2025; 254(2):189-204.

PMID: 39895010 PMC: 11809136. DOI: 10.1002/dvdy.755.


Food Grinding Behavior: A Review of Causality and Influential Factors.

Tang H, Ge W, Wei W, Yang S, Dai X Animals (Basel). 2024; 14(13).

PMID: 38997977 PMC: 11240756. DOI: 10.3390/ani14131865.


Biological Sex Influences Daily Locomotor Rhythms in Mice Held Under Different Housing Conditions.

Pastrick A, Diaz M, Adaya G, Montinola V, Arzbecker M, Joye D J Biol Rhythms. 2024; 39(4):351-364.

PMID: 38845380 PMC: 11322640. DOI: 10.1177/07487304241256004.


Treadmill exercise training inhibits morphine CPP by reversing morphine effects on GABA neurotransmission in D2-MSNs of the accumbens-pallidal pathway in male mice.

Dong Y, Gan Y, Fu Y, Shi H, Dai S, Yu R Neuropsychopharmacology. 2024; 49(11):1700-1710.

PMID: 38714787 PMC: 11399312. DOI: 10.1038/s41386-024-01869-4.


Development and implementation of a Dependable, Simple, and Cost-effective (DSC), open-source running wheel in High Drinking in the Dark and Heterogeneous Stock/Northport mice.

Grigsby K, Usmani Z, Anderson J, Ozburn A Front Behav Neurosci. 2024; 17:1321349.

PMID: 38288095 PMC: 10823001. DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2023.1321349.