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Article

Effects of Clicker Training on Behavioral and Stress Markers of Welfare in the F1 Generation of CD1 Mice: A Pilot Study

TARCforce3R Center, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University, 55122 Mainz, Germany
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Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Animals 2026, 16(11), 1642; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16111642
Submission received: 26 March 2026 / Revised: 18 May 2026 / Accepted: 19 May 2026 / Published: 27 May 2026
(This article belongs to the Section Animal Welfare)

Simple Summary

Training methods have become increasingly important for laboratory animal welfare, with clicker training representing a specific and widely used form of positive reinforcement training (PRT). Clicker training has been shown to improve animals’ quality of life by increasing voluntary interactions with experimenters, which are associated with reductions in anxiety-related behaviors. This pilot study investigated the potential impact of clicker training as a form of PRT on behavioral and physiological stress markers in F1-generation Crl:CD1(ICR) mice without a stressor. The findings indicate that clicker training could enhance human–animal interactions in F1-generation without decreasing animal welfare, supporting clicker training potential to refine laboratory animal research and improve welfare outcomes.

Abstract

Training in laboratory animals is important to ensure that scientific studies are reliable, reproducible, and ethically acceptable. Well-trained animals experience less stress and exhibit fewer unwanted behaviors, improving both welfare and research outcomes. Clicker training is widely used in animal training as a positive reinforcement method to reduce distress. The present study was designed as a pilot study to examine the effects of a four-day clicker training protocol applied to both dams and their offspring, with behavioral outcomes assessed exclusively in the offspring. The results indicated that clicker training potentially increased voluntary interaction with the experimenter and promoted body weight gain during the training period. No significant effects of offspring training were found for classical anxiety-related measures (EPM open arm time, OF center time, Nest Building Test, Sucrose Preference Test, Forced Swim Test) or plasma corticosterone. A potential sex effect was observed across locomotor, center-zone, and corticosterone measures. Maternal training effects on offspring outcomes should be interpreted as preliminary exploratory observations, as only two dams per maternal group were available. Given the exploratory nature and limited sample size of this pilot study, the findings should be interpreted with caution. Under the present condition, clicker training produced a context-specific improvement in human–animal interaction without evidence of harm, but did not produce generalized reductions in anxiety-like behaviors as assessed by standard paradigms. Further studies with larger sample sizes are needed to confirm these findings.
Keywords: clicker training; laboratory mice; PRT; animal welfare; behavioral tests; corticosterone; 3R; refinement techniques clicker training; laboratory mice; PRT; animal welfare; behavioral tests; corticosterone; 3R; refinement techniques

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MDPI and ACS Style

Reichel, S.; Gonzalez-Uarquin, F.; Pichl, D.; Radyushkin, K.; Baumgart, J.; Baumgart, N. Effects of Clicker Training on Behavioral and Stress Markers of Welfare in the F1 Generation of CD1 Mice: A Pilot Study. Animals 2026, 16, 1642. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16111642

AMA Style

Reichel S, Gonzalez-Uarquin F, Pichl D, Radyushkin K, Baumgart J, Baumgart N. Effects of Clicker Training on Behavioral and Stress Markers of Welfare in the F1 Generation of CD1 Mice: A Pilot Study. Animals. 2026; 16(11):1642. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16111642

Chicago/Turabian Style

Reichel, Sandra, Fernando Gonzalez-Uarquin, Dorothea Pichl, Konstantin Radyushkin, Jan Baumgart, and Nadine Baumgart. 2026. "Effects of Clicker Training on Behavioral and Stress Markers of Welfare in the F1 Generation of CD1 Mice: A Pilot Study" Animals 16, no. 11: 1642. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16111642

APA Style

Reichel, S., Gonzalez-Uarquin, F., Pichl, D., Radyushkin, K., Baumgart, J., & Baumgart, N. (2026). Effects of Clicker Training on Behavioral and Stress Markers of Welfare in the F1 Generation of CD1 Mice: A Pilot Study. Animals, 16(11), 1642. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16111642

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