4.5 Review

In search of behavioral and brain processes involved in honey bee dance communication

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2023.1140657

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honey bee; waggle dance; brain; rhumb-line; neuromodulation; experience-based modulatory system; antenna-mechano-motor center; central complex

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Honey bees are commonly used as a model to study communication and cognitive abilities. The waggle dance has been extensively studied to understand its neural mechanisms and behavioral significance. Recent research has focused on different aspects like neuromodulators, interneurons, and navigation centers to unravel the communication process.
Honey bees represent an iconic model animal for studying the underlying mechanisms affecting advanced sensory and cognitive abilities during communication among colony mates. After von Frisch discovered the functional value of the waggle dance, this complex motor pattern led ethologists and neuroscientists to study its neural mechanism, behavioral significance, and implications for a collective organization. Recent studies have revealed some of the mechanisms involved in this symbolic form of communication by using conventional behavioral and pharmacological assays, neurobiological studies, comprehensive molecular and connectome analyses, and computational models. This review summarizes several critical behavioral and brain processes and mechanisms involved in waggle dance communication. We focus on the role of neuromodulators in the dancer and the recruited follower, the interneurons and their related processing in the first mechano-processing, and the computational navigation centers of insect brains.

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