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Scientists have discovered that rodents are trying to revive each other, such as humans when they discover their peers, to be unconscious.
A series of mice experiments witnessed the revival of its companion by reviving the mouse to the mouse, instead of getting rid of the distance.
The study, published in the magazine sciencesHe saw the mouse on anesthesia and made it temporarily unconscious, while a “spectator” mouse was presented.
Scientists merged behavioral monitoring with a comments based on machine learning to show that when mice faced a familiar social partner, they came out of the subconscious, they tried constantly to wake them.
They started by inhalation, grooming and their behavior escalating into more powerful actions, such as biting the partner’s mouth or his tongue and pulling the tongue out to clean air roads.
In more than half of the cases, the mice pulled the light mouse tongue to enlarge the airway. When the incapable rodents had a small plastic ball in his mouth, 80 percent of the time managed to extract it before continuing his life -saving routine.
This behavior was not only effective, but the researchers noted how we reminded us of human first aid procedures.
“These behaviors remind us of how human beings teach the airway to be cleared of the unconscious individual during CPR,” they noticed.
Their behaviors have suggested “efforts similar to the revival” between mice.
Scientists have noted that these behaviors were “severely affected” the extent of mice knowing each other, but it is unlikely to be driven by the desire for mutual social interaction of curiosity about something new.
This is not the first time that scientists have documented mammals that help each other; The chimpanzee was seen tending to the wounded companions, while the dolphin is known to push the members of a sad pod to the surface to help them breathe.