Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Manchester.
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience, and Behaviour, McMaster University.
Can J Exp Psychol. 2020 Sep;74(3):215-227. doi: 10.1037/cep0000236.
It has been hypothesised that some specialised cognitive abilities may have evolved because of the challenges of living in complex social environments. Therefore, more-social species might be able to learn faster than less-social species. The aim of this study was to develop a learning framework to test how more- and less-social Lamprologine cichlid fishes perform across associative learning tasks. These cichlids are a group of closely related species with similar ecologies and life histories but varying degrees of sociality, making them an ideal group for comparative learning studies. We found that three nongrouping cichlids (Telmatochromis temporalis, Lamprologus meleagris, and Neolamprologus tretocephalus) outperformed three closely related highly social, cooperatively breeding cichlids (N. pulcher, N. multifasciatus, and Julidochromis dickfeldi) on an associative learning task based on food rewards. However, we hypothesised that these differences may be caused by the social environment during testing and might not reflect true cognitive differences. Indeed, when we drilled down and compared just two species across four different social conditions, we found that the social environment during learning trials affected the performance of the highly social N. pulcher and the less-social T. temporalis differently. We then performed further experiments with both N. pulcher and T. temporalis under more natural social settings. Under these more natural social conditions, we found that N. pulcher learned to differentiate accessible and inaccessible shelters faster than T. temporalis. These findings highlight the potential for expanding comparative experiments investigating the relationship between sociality and cognition and emphasise the crucial role social environment plays in learning outcomes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
有人假设,某些专门的认知能力可能是由于生活在复杂社会环境中的挑战而进化而来的。因此,更具社交性的物种可能比不太社交的物种学习得更快。本研究的目的是开发一个学习框架,以测试更具社交性和不具社交性的 Lamprologine 慈鲷鱼类在联想学习任务中的表现。这些慈鲷是一组密切相关的物种,具有相似的生态和生活史,但社交程度不同,使它们成为比较学习研究的理想群体。我们发现,三种非群居慈鲷(Telmatochromis temporalis、Lamprologus meleagris 和 Neolamprologus tretocephalus)在基于食物奖励的联想学习任务中的表现优于三种密切相关的高度社会性、合作繁殖的慈鲷(N. pulcher、N. multifasciatus 和 Julidochromis dickfeldi)。然而,我们假设这些差异可能是由于测试期间的社会环境造成的,而不一定反映真正的认知差异。事实上,当我们深入研究并比较两种物种在四种不同的社会条件下的表现时,我们发现学习试验期间的社会环境对高度社会性的 N. pulcher 和不那么社会性的 T. temporalis 的表现有不同的影响。然后,我们在更自然的社会环境下对 N. pulcher 和 T. temporalis 进行了进一步的实验。在这些更自然的社会条件下,我们发现 N. pulcher 比 T. temporalis 更快地学会区分可及和不可及的避难所。这些发现强调了扩展比较实验以研究社会性和认知之间关系的潜力,并强调了社会环境在学习结果中的关键作用。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2020 APA,保留所有权利)。