Mansur Breno E, Rodrigues Jean R V, Mota Theo
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Front Psychol. 2018 Aug 24;9:1529. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01529. eCollection 2018.
In natural environments, stimuli and events learned by animals usually occur in a combination of more than one sensory modality. An important problem in experimental psychology has been thus to understand how organisms learn about multimodal compounds and how they discriminate this compounds from their unimodal constituents. Here we tested the ability of honey bees to learn bimodal patterning discriminations in which a visual-olfactory compound (AB) should be differentiated from its visual (A) and olfactory (B) elements. We found that harnessed bees trained in classical conditioning of the proboscis extension reflex (PER) are able to solve bimodal positive and negative patterning (NP) tasks. In positive patterning (PP), bees learned to respond significantly more to a bimodal reinforced compound (AB+) than to non-reinforced presentations of single visual (A-) or olfactory (B-) elements. In NP, bees learned to suppress their responses to a non-reinforced compound (AB-) and increase their responses to reinforced presentations of visual (A+) or olfactory (B+) elements alone. We compared the effect of two different inter-trial intervals (ITI) in our conditioning approaches. Whereas an ITI of 8 min allowed solving both PP and NP, only PP could be solved with a shorter ITI of 3 min. In all successful cases of bimodal PP and NP, bees were still able to discriminate between reinforced and non-reinforced stimuli in memory tests performed one hour after conditioning. The analysis of individual performances in PP and NP revealed that different learning strategies emerged in distinct individuals. Both in PP and NP, high levels of generalization were found between elements and compound at the individual level, suggesting a similar difficulty for bees to solve these bimodal patterning tasks. We discuss our results in light of elemental and configural learning theories that may support the strategies adopted by honey bees to solve bimodal PP or NP discriminations.
在自然环境中,动物学到的刺激和事件通常以不止一种感官模态的组合形式出现。因此,实验心理学中的一个重要问题是要理解生物体如何学习多模态化合物,以及它们如何将这种化合物与单模态成分区分开来。在这里,我们测试了蜜蜂学习双模态模式辨别能力,即视觉-嗅觉化合物(AB)应与视觉(A)和嗅觉(B)元素区分开来。我们发现,在经典条件下训练吻伸反射(PER)的束缚蜜蜂能够解决双模态正向和负向模式(NP)任务。在正向模式(PP)中,蜜蜂学会对双模态强化化合物(AB+)的反应明显多于对单视觉(A-)或嗅觉(B-)元素的非强化呈现。在NP中,蜜蜂学会抑制对非强化化合物(AB-)的反应,并增加对单独视觉(A+)或嗅觉(B+)元素强化呈现的反应。我们在条件训练方法中比较了两种不同的试间间隔(ITI)的效果。8分钟的ITI能够解决PP和NP,而只有3分钟的较短ITI只能解决PP。在所有成功的双模态PP和NP案例中,蜜蜂在条件训练后一小时进行的记忆测试中仍能区分强化和非强化刺激。对PP和NP中个体表现的分析表明,不同个体出现了不同的学习策略。在PP和NP中,在个体水平上元素和化合物之间都发现了高度的泛化,这表明蜜蜂解决这些双模态模式任务存在类似的困难。我们根据元素和构型学习理论讨论了我们的结果,这些理论可能支持蜜蜂用来解决双模态PP或NP辨别的策略。