Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany.
PLoS One. 2013 Sep 10;8(9):e74144. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0074144. eCollection 2013.
Weber's law quantifies the perception of difference between stimuli. For instance, it can explain why we are less likely to detect the removal of three nuts from a bowl if the bowl is full than if it is nearly empty. This is an example of the magnitude effect - the phenomenon that the subjective perception of a linear difference between a pair of stimuli progressively diminishes when the average magnitude of the stimuli increases. Although discrimination performances of both human and animal subjects in various sensory modalities exhibit the magnitude effect, results sometimes systematically deviate from the quantitative predictions based on Weber's law. An attempt to reformulate the law to better fit data from acoustic discrimination tasks has been dubbed the "near-miss to Weber's law". Here, we tested the gustatory discrimination performance of nectar-feeding bats (Glossophaga soricina), in order to investigate whether the original version of Weber's law accurately predicts choice behavior in a two-alternative forced choice task. As expected, bats either preferred the sweeter of the two options or showed no preference. In 4 out of 6 bats the near-miss to Weber's law provided a better fit and Weber's law underestimated the magnitude effect. In order to test the generality of this observation in nectar-feeders, we reviewed previously published data on bats, hummingbirds, honeybees, and bumblebees. In all groups of animals the near-miss to Weber's law provided better fits than Weber's law. Furthermore, whereas the magnitude effect was stronger than predicted by Weber's law in vertebrates, it was weaker than predicted in insects. Thus nectar-feeding vertebrates and insects seem to differ in how their choice behavior changes as sugar concentration is increased. We discuss the ecological and evolutionary implications of the observed patterns of sugar concentration discrimination.
韦伯定律量化了刺激之间差异的感知。例如,它可以解释为什么当碗装满时,我们不太可能察觉到从碗中取出三个坚果,而当碗几乎空时,我们更容易察觉到。这是幅度效应的一个例子——当刺激的平均幅度增加时,对一对刺激之间线性差异的主观感知逐渐减小。尽管人类和动物在各种感觉模式下的辨别性能都表现出幅度效应,但结果有时会系统地偏离基于韦伯定律的定量预测。为了更好地拟合来自声学辨别任务的数据,人们尝试重新表述该定律,这被称为“接近韦伯定律的误差”。在这里,我们测试了食蜜蝙蝠( Glossophaga soricina )的味觉辨别性能,以调查原始版本的韦伯定律是否能准确预测在二选一强制选择任务中的选择行为。正如预期的那样,蝙蝠要么更喜欢两种选择中的较甜的一种,要么没有偏好。在 6 只蝙蝠中的 4 只中,接近韦伯定律的误差提供了更好的拟合,而韦伯定律低估了幅度效应。为了检验这一观察结果在食蜜动物中的普遍性,我们回顾了之前关于蝙蝠、蜂鸟、蜜蜂和熊蜂的发表数据。在所有动物群体中,接近韦伯定律的误差提供了更好的拟合,而韦伯定律则低估了幅度效应。此外,虽然幅度效应在脊椎动物中比韦伯定律预测的更强,但在昆虫中比预测的更弱。因此,食蜜的脊椎动物和昆虫在其选择行为随糖浓度增加而变化的方式上似乎存在差异。我们讨论了观察到的糖浓度辨别模式的生态和进化意义。