Granted, in humans, true musophobia is no laughing matter. While the TV show MythBusters confirmed that elephants do seem to have a disproportionately oversized reaction when surprised by a mouse, humans have plenty of reasons to fear mice. Wherever mice go, there goes disease and destruction of property. Request A Quote.

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Fear of mice and rats is one of the least common [ citation needed ] specific phobias. The phobia, as an unreasonable and disproportionate fear , is distinct from reasonable concern about rats and mice contaminating food supplies, which may potentially be universal to all times, places, and cultures where stored grain attracts rodents, which then consume or contaminate the food supply. In many cases a phobic fear of mice is a socially induced conditioned response , combined with and originated in the startle response a response to an unexpected stimulus common in many animals, including humans, rather than a real disorder. At the same time, as is common with specific phobias, an occasional fright may give rise to abnormal anxiety that requires treatment. Fear of mice may be treated by any standard treatment for specific phobias.
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Rats and mice can be found in and around every town and farm in the country. It is estimated that there is one rat for every person living in the United States. Rodents have followed man to almost all parts of the world. They have no respect for social class; they are equal opportunity pests. Rats and mice are so closely linked to man they are called domestic rodents. Man supplies their three basic needs: food, shelter, and water.
A staple of early domestic comedies in both film and television. The mere sight of a mouse or sometimes another animal who is the subject of a common phobia will drive a housewife up onto a chair or a table, where she stands shrieking, stomping her feet, and clutching the hem of her skirt until the rodent is captured or driven away. This is largely a Dead Horse Trope today, with old examples rooted in a very specific and sexist image of women dating back to the early part of the 20th Century , but it is still visible in old Looney Tunes cartoons and in the odd ironic reference.