Mayack Christopher, Naug Dhruba
Martin Luther Universität Halle-Wittenberg, Institute for Biology/General Zoology, 06120 Halle (Saale), Germany
Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA.
Biol Lett. 2015 Jan;11(1):20140820. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2014.0820.
Impulsivity, the widespread preference for a smaller and more immediate reward over a larger and more delayed reward, is known to vary across species, and the metabolic and social hypotheses present contrasting explanations for this variation. However, this presents a paradox for an animal such as the honeybee, which is highly social, yet has a high metabolic rate. We test between these two competing hypotheses by investigating the effect of hunger on impulsivity in bees isolated from their social environment. Using an olfactory conditioning assay, we trained individuals to associate a small and a large reward with or without a delay, and we tested their choice between the two rewards at different levels of starvation. We found an increase in impulsive behaviour and an associated increase in dopamine levels in the brain with increasing starvation. These results suggest that the energetic state of an individual, even in a eusocial group, is a critical driver of impulsivity, and that the social harmony of a group can be threatened when the energetic states of the group members are in conflict.
冲动性,即普遍倾向于选择较小且即时的奖励而非较大且延迟的奖励,已知在不同物种间存在差异,代谢假说和社会假说对这种差异给出了截然不同的解释。然而,这给蜜蜂这样的动物带来了一个悖论,蜜蜂高度社会化,但代谢率却很高。我们通过研究饥饿对与社会环境隔离的蜜蜂冲动性的影响,来在这两种相互竞争的假说之间进行检验。使用嗅觉条件反射测定法,我们训练个体将小奖励和大奖励与有无延迟联系起来,并在不同饥饿程度下测试它们在两种奖励之间的选择。我们发现,随着饥饿程度增加,冲动行为增加,大脑中的多巴胺水平也相应增加。这些结果表明,即使在一个群居昆虫群体中,个体的能量状态也是冲动性的关键驱动因素,并且当群体成员的能量状态发生冲突时,群体的社会和谐可能会受到威胁。