School of Zoology, George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, 6997801, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Department of Psychology, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2022 Dec;97(6):2076-2089. doi: 10.1111/brv.12883. Epub 2022 Jul 12.
Area-restricted search is the capacity to change search effort adaptively in response to resource encounters or expectations, from directional exploration (global, extensive search) to focused exploitation (local, intensive search). This search pattern is used by numerous organisms, from worms and insects to humans, to find various targets, such as food, mates, nests, and other resources. Area-restricted search has been studied for at least 80 years by ecologists, and more recently in the neurological and psychological literature. In general, the conditions promoting this search pattern are: (1) clustered resources; (2) active search (e.g. not a sit-and-wait predator); (3) searcher memory for recent target encounters or expectations; and (4) searcher ignorance about the exact location of targets. Because area-restricted search adapts to resource encounters, the search can be performed at multiple spatial scales. Models and experiments have demonstrated that area-restricted search is superior to alternative search patterns that do not involve a memory of the exact location of the target, such as correlated random walks or Lévy walks/flights. Area-restricted search is triggered by sensory cues whereas concentrated search in the absence of sensory cues is associated with other forms of foraging. Some neural underpinnings of area-restricted search are probably shared across metazoans, suggesting a shared ancestry and a shared solution to a common ecological problem of finding clustered resources. Area-restricted search is also apparent in other domains, such as memory and visual search in humans, which may indicate an exaptation from spatial search to other forms of search. Here, we review these various aspects of area-restricted search, as well as how to identify it, and point to open questions.
区域限制搜索是一种根据资源的发现或预期,自适应地改变搜索努力的能力,从定向探索(全局、广泛搜索)到集中开发(局部、密集搜索)。这种搜索模式被许多生物所采用,从蠕虫和昆虫到人类,以寻找各种目标,如食物、配偶、巢穴和其他资源。区域限制搜索至少已经被生态学家研究了 80 多年,最近也在神经科学和心理学文献中得到了研究。一般来说,促进这种搜索模式的条件有:(1)聚集的资源;(2)主动搜索(例如,不是坐等捕食者);(3)搜索者对最近目标发现或预期的记忆;以及(4)搜索者对目标的确切位置的无知。由于区域限制搜索适应资源的发现,因此可以在多个空间尺度上进行搜索。模型和实验表明,区域限制搜索优于不涉及目标的确切位置记忆的替代搜索模式,例如相关随机游走或 Lévy 游走/飞行。区域限制搜索是由感官线索触发的,而在没有感官线索的情况下进行集中搜索则与其他形式的觅食有关。区域限制搜索的一些神经基础可能在后生动物中是共享的,这表明它们具有共同的进化起源和解决寻找聚集资源这一共同生态问题的共同解决方案。区域限制搜索也出现在其他领域,例如人类的记忆和视觉搜索,这可能表明从空间搜索到其他形式搜索的适应。在这里,我们回顾了区域限制搜索的这些不同方面,以及如何识别它,并指出了一些未解决的问题。