4.5 Article

Evidence of cognitive specialization in an insect: proficiency is maintained across elemental and higher-order visual learning but not between sensory modalities in honey bees

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 224, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.242470

Keywords

Apis mellifera; Cognitive consistency; Honey bee; Insect cognition; Inter-individual variability; Visual cognition

Categories

Funding

  1. Fondation Fyssen
  2. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
  3. Institut Universitaire de France
  4. Universite Toulouse III -Paul Sabatier
  5. European Research Council
  6. Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes
  7. Rita Levi Montalcini Fellowship by Ministero dell'Istruzione, dell'Universitae della Ricerca [PGR15YTFW9]

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The study found that individual learning proficiency within a given task was maintained over time, with some individuals performing consistently better than others within the visual modality across tasks of different complexity. However, performance in the elemental visual-learning task did not predict performance in the equivalent elemental olfactory task. This suggests the existence of cognitive specialization within the hive, contributing to ecological social success.
Individuals differing in their cognitive abilities and foraging strategies may confer a valuable benefit to their social groups as variability may help them to respond flexibly in scenarios with different resource availability. Individual learning proficiency may either be absolute or vary with the complexity or the nature of the problem considered. Determining whether learning ability correlates between tasks of different complexity or between sensory modalities is of high interest for research on brain modularity and task-dependent specialization of neural circuits. The honeybee Apis mellifera constitutes an attractive model to address this question because of its capacity to successfully learn a large range of tasks in various sensory domains. Here, we studied whether the performance of individual bees in a simple visual discrimination task (a discrimination between two visual shapes) is stable over time and correlates with their capacity to solve either a higher-order visual task (a conceptual discrimination based on spatial relationships between objects) or an elemental olfactory task (a discrimination between two odorants). We found that individual learning proficiency within a given task was maintained over time and that some individuals performed consistently better than others within the visual modality, thus showing consistent aptitude across visual tasks of different complexity. By contrast, performance in the elemental visual-learning task did not predict performance in the equivalent elemental olfactory task. Overall, our results suggest the existence of cognitive specialization within the hive, which may contribute to ecological social success.

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