Institute of Systems Neuroscience, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu, Taiwan.
Anim Cogn. 2013 May;16(3):313-20. doi: 10.1007/s10071-012-0573-z. Epub 2012 Oct 26.
Observational learning is the ability to learn through observing others' behavior. The benefit of observational learning is apparent in that individuals can save time and energy without trial-and-error, thus enhance the chance of survival and reproduction. Cephalopods (octopus, squid, and cuttlefish) have the most sophisticated central nervous system among invertebrates, and it is conceivable that cephalopods can develop some forms of cognition. Although it has been suggested that octopuses have the capacity of observational learning, a previous study indicates that cuttlefish do not improve their predation tactics by observing conspecifics. Given that the danger avoidance is important for animals' survival, we sought to reevaluate whether cuttlefish show some form of observational learning or observational conditioning under threatening conditions. Cuttlefish (Sepia pharaonis) were divided into three groups: the Experiencer group, the Observer group, and the Control group. In the training phase, a toy submarine was remotely controlled to expel the cuttlefish from its initially preferred place to establish the threat-place association in the Experiencer group. In the Observer group, the threat-place association was established by expelling a conspecific demonstrator at the observer's initially preferred place while the observer watched the whole process from behind a transparent divider. In the Control group, the observer watched a conspecific and a static toy submarine without actual threat. In the testing phase, the choice of safe place in the absence of threat was used to probe the learning/conditioning of cuttlefish. In the Experiencer group, we found that animals chose the safe place more often than their initially preferred place after training, an indication of the association learning/conditioning. However, in the Observer group, only a subset of animals showed this threat-place association by observation, while the place preference was unchanged in the Control group. These results indicate that most cuttlefish did not learn by observing others, but individual differences exist, and some cuttlefish may have the potential of observational learning/conditioning within their cognitive capacities.
观察学习是指通过观察他人的行为来学习的能力。观察学习的好处显而易见,因为个体可以避免试错,从而节省时间和精力,提高生存和繁殖的机会。头足类动物(章鱼、鱿鱼和乌贼)拥有无脊椎动物中最复杂的中枢神经系统,可以想象它们可以发展出某种形式的认知。虽然已经有人提出章鱼具有观察学习的能力,但之前的一项研究表明,乌贼不会通过观察同种动物来改善捕食策略。鉴于回避危险对动物的生存至关重要,我们试图重新评估乌贼在威胁条件下是否表现出某种形式的观察学习或观察条件作用。章鱼(Sepia pharaonis)被分为三组:体验组、观察组和对照组。在训练阶段,遥控一个玩具潜艇将章鱼从其最初喜欢的地方赶走,在体验组中建立威胁地点的联系。在观察组中,通过将一个同种动物的示范者驱逐到观察者最初喜欢的地方,同时让观察者从透明隔板后面观察整个过程,建立威胁地点的联系。在对照组中,观察者观看一个同种动物和一个静态的玩具潜艇,没有实际的威胁。在测试阶段,在没有威胁的情况下选择安全的地方来探测章鱼的学习/条件作用。在体验组中,我们发现动物在训练后比最初喜欢的地方更频繁地选择安全的地方,这表明它们已经学会了这种关联。然而,在观察组中,只有一部分动物通过观察表现出这种威胁地点的关联,而对照组的位置偏好没有改变。这些结果表明,大多数乌贼没有通过观察他人来学习,但存在个体差异,一些乌贼可能在其认知能力范围内具有观察学习/条件作用的潜力。