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Neuroscientists are searching for the 'cellular substrate of loneliness'

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CitrixNews Staff
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Neuroscientists are searching for the 'cellular substrate of loneliness'
A painting showing a series of people around a bar. In Edward Hopper's 1942 painting "Nighthawks," the eye is drawn to a couple at one end of the bar and then a lone man seated at the other end. (Image credit: EDWARD HOPPER / PUBLIC DOMAIN) Share this article 0 Join the conversation Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter

To our human eyes, a mouse's furred face doesn't betray much emotion. But if you watch the body language of a mouse who's reunited with one of her sisters after five days in a cage alone, you might suspect you know what she’s feeling.

The formerly isolated mouse chatters in squeaks too high for a human to hear. She follows her sister, crawling beneath the other mouse's body as if trying to get a hug. She looks like she's feeling what you or I feel when meeting a long-lost friend or a family member — maybe with more sniffing.

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Different species, and even individuals within species, have different social needs. Orangutans, for example, are the most solitary of the great apes.

(Image credit: ALANBEDFORDSHAW / iNATURALIST.ORG, CC by 4.0)

Our sense of touch may be an important part of our social thermostat.

(Image credit: PHOTO BY PATTY BRITO ON UNSPLASH) Mouse reunion - YouTube Mouse reunion - YouTube Watch On

Naked mole rats are the only mammals that live in organized, cooperative colonies akin to those of honeybees or ants. They're also extremely cuddly.

(Image credit: BOB OWEN / FLICKR, CC by 2.0)Related stories

Elizabeth PrestonFreelance science journalist

Elizabeth Preston is a freelance science journalist and author of the new book The Creatures’ Guide to Caring. She lives near Boston.

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Originally reported by Live Science. Read the full story at the original source.