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大脑大小:学习的全局成本还是诱导成本?

Brain size: a global or induced cost of learning?

作者信息

Snell-Rood Emilie C, Papaj Daniel R, Gronenberg Wulfila

机构信息

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.

出版信息

Brain Behav Evol. 2009;73(2):111-28. doi: 10.1159/000213647. Epub 2009 Apr 22.

Abstract

The role of brain size as a cost of learning remains enigmatic; the nature and timing of such costs is particularly uncertain. On one hand, comparative studies suggest that congenitally large brains promote better learning and memory. In that case, brain size exacts a global cost that accrues even if learning does not take place; on the other hand, some developmental studies suggest that brains grow with experience, indicating a cost that is induced when learning occurs. The issue of how costs are incurred is an important one, because global costs are expected to constrain the evolution of learning more than would induced costs. We tested whether brain size represented a global and/or an induced cost of learning in the cabbage white butterfly, Pieris rapae. We assayed the ability of full sibling families to learn to locate either green hosts, for which butterflies have an innate search bias, or red hosts, which are more difficult to learn to locate. Naïve butterflies were sacrificed at emergence and congenital brain volume estimated as a measure of global costs; experienced butterflies were sacrificed after learning and change in brain volume estimated as a measure of induced costs. Only for the mushroom body, a brain region involved in learning and memory in other insects, was volume at emergence related to learning or host-finding. Butterfly families that emerged with relatively larger mushroom bodies showed a greater tendency to improve their ability to find red hosts across the two days of host-search. The volume of most brain regions increased with time in a manner suggesting host experience itself was important: first, total number of landings during host-search was positively related to mushroom body calyx volume, and, second, experience with the red host was positively related to mushroom body lobe volume. At the family level, the relative volume of the mushroom body calyx and antennal lobes following learning was positively related to overall success in finding red hosts. Overall, our results suggest that within species, brain size might act as a small global cost of learning, but that environment-specific changes in brain size might reduce the overall costs of neural tissue in the evolution of learning.

摘要

大脑大小作为学习成本的作用仍然是个谜;这种成本的性质和时间尤其不确定。一方面,比较研究表明,先天性大脑较大有助于更好地学习和记忆。在这种情况下,即使不发生学习,大脑大小也会产生一种整体成本;另一方面,一些发育研究表明,大脑会随着经验而生长,这表明学习发生时会产生一种成本。成本如何产生的问题很重要,因为整体成本预计比诱导成本更能限制学习的进化。我们测试了在菜粉蝶(Pieris rapae)中,大脑大小是否代表学习的整体成本和/或诱导成本。我们测定了全同胞家系学习定位绿色寄主(蝴蝶对其有先天搜索偏好)或红色寄主(更难学会定位)的能力。初出茅庐的蝴蝶在羽化时被处死,先天性脑容量被估计为整体成本的一种衡量;有经验的蝴蝶在学习后被处死,脑容量的变化被估计为诱导成本的一种衡量。只有蘑菇体(在其他昆虫中参与学习和记忆的脑区),羽化时的体积与学习或寄主寻找有关。羽化时蘑菇体相对较大的蝴蝶家系在两天的寄主搜索过程中,表现出更强的提高寻找红色寄主能力的趋势。大多数脑区的体积随时间增加,这表明寄主经验本身很重要:首先,寄主搜索期间的着陆总数与蘑菇体花萼体积呈正相关,其次,对红色寄主的经验与蘑菇体叶体积呈正相关。在家庭层面,学习后蘑菇体花萼和触角叶的相对体积与寻找红色寄主的总体成功率呈正相关。总体而言,我们的结果表明,在物种内部,大脑大小可能作为学习的一种较小的整体成本,但大脑大小的环境特异性变化可能会在学习进化过程中降低神经组织的总体成本。

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