Abstract: | A study of the effects of the duration of individual and group housing on intermale fighting and adrenocortical activity was conducted in TO strain mice. It was found that fighting and threat increased with progressive isolation up to an asymptote at 56–58 days. ‘Basal’ adrenocortical function differed little under the 2 housing conditions, but after ‘stress,’ mice isolated for short periods, which had not fought when tested for aggression, had lower titers than group-housed counterparts. However, mice that had been isolated for longer periods, and had fought in aggression tests, had higher corticosterone titers than comparable group-housed animals. The effects of a short duration (28–30 days) of differential housing, commencing at different ages, were also studied. The shorter duration adrenocortical changes were largely confirmed. In general, the earlier the age at which the differential housing was imposed, the greater the behavioral differences between animals under each housing condition. It is suggested that this is largely a consequence of a loss of behavioral plasticity in older mice. The data provides little support for the concept of the “isolation stress syndrome,” or for the view that the characteristic fighting exhibited by individually housed mice is a consequence of “social deprivation”. |