Jumping

Overview and Meaning

Jumping is a stereotypy - a repetitive, unvarying behavior lacking apparent goal or function. A mouse can jump about 2-3 times per second, momentarily pausing between jumps.

Description

Jumping is a repetitious upright motion towards the cage top. Sometimes when rearing, mice may jump up towards the cage lid.

Jumping can be distinguished as follows:

  1. Single jumps are a perfectly normal behavior.
  2. To classify this behavior as a stereotypy, there will be an intense cluster of jumps (more than 20 per minute) or the mouse will do a smaller number of jumps but in multiple consecutive sessions.
  3. A jumping session ends when the mouse stops jumping and moves away from the jumping site and performs another behavior for a significant amount of seconds before returning to jumping.

Classification

Stereotypy

Contexts

Malfunctional

Variants

None