Bierbach David, Landgraf Tim, Romanczuk Pawel, Lukas Juliane, Nguyen Hai, Wolf Max, Krause Jens
Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries, Müggelseedamm 310, 12587 Berlin, Germany.
Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Freie Universität Berlin, Institute for Computer Science, Arnimallee 7, 14195 Berlin, Germany.
R Soc Open Sci. 2018 Aug 8;5(8):181026. doi: 10.1098/rsos.181026. eCollection 2018 Aug.
Responding towards the actions of others is one of the most important behavioural traits whenever animals of the same species interact. Mutual influences among interacting individuals may modulate the social responsiveness seen and thus make it often difficult to study the level and individual variation in responsiveness. Here, open-loop biomimetic robots that provide standardized, non-interactive social cues can be a useful tool. These robots are not affected by the live animal's actions but are assumed to still represent valuable and biologically relevant social cues. As this assumption is crucial for the use of biomimetic robots in behavioural studies, we hypothesized (i) that meaningful social interactions can be assumed if live animals maintain individual differences in responsiveness when interacting with both a biomimetic robot and a live partner. Furthermore, to study the level of individual variation in social responsiveness, we hypothesized (ii) that individual differences should be maintained over the course of multiple tests with the robot. We investigated the response of live guppies () when allowed to interact either with a biomimetic open-loop-controlled fish robot-'Robofish'-or with a live companion. Furthermore, we investigated the responses of live guppies when tested three times with Robofish. We found that responses of live guppies towards Robofish were weaker compared with those of a live companion, most likely as a result of the non-interactive open-loop behaviour of Robofish. Guppies, however, were consistent in their individual responses between a live companion and Robofish, and similar individual differences in response towards Robofish were maintained over repeated testing even though habituation to the test environment was detectable. Biomimetic robots like Robofish are therefore a useful tool for the study of social responsiveness in guppies and possibly other small fish species.
当同一物种的动物相互作用时,对其他个体行为做出反应是最重要的行为特征之一。相互作用的个体之间的相互影响可能会调节所观察到的社会反应性,因此常常难以研究反应性的水平和个体差异。在这里,提供标准化、非交互式社会线索的开环仿生机器人可能是一种有用的工具。这些机器人不受活体动物行为的影响,但仍被认为代表着有价值且与生物学相关的社会线索。由于这一假设对于在行为研究中使用仿生机器人至关重要,我们假设:(i)如果活体动物在与仿生机器人和活体伙伴互动时保持反应性的个体差异,那么就可以假定存在有意义的社会互动。此外,为了研究社会反应性的个体差异水平,我们假设:(ii)在对机器人进行多次测试的过程中,个体差异应该保持不变。我们研究了活体孔雀鱼在与开环控制的仿生鱼机器人“机器鱼”或活体伙伴互动时的反应。此外,我们还研究了活体孔雀鱼在对机器鱼进行三次测试时的反应。我们发现,与活体伙伴相比,活体孔雀鱼对机器鱼的反应较弱,这很可能是由于机器鱼的非交互式开环行为所致。然而,孔雀鱼对活体伙伴和机器鱼的个体反应是一致的,即使可以检测到对测试环境的适应,但在重复测试中,对机器鱼的反应仍保持类似的个体差异。因此,像机器鱼这样的仿生机器人是研究孔雀鱼以及可能其他小型鱼类物种社会反应性的有用工具。