Faculty of Life Sciences, Thaer-Institute, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Department of Biology and Ecology of Fishes, Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries, Berlin, Germany.
Bioinspir Biomim. 2022 Oct 18;17(6). doi: 10.1088/1748-3190/ac8e3e.
The ability of an individual to predict the outcome of the actions of others and to change their own behavior adaptively is called anticipation. There are many examples from mammalian species-including humans-that show anticipatory abilities in a social context, however, it is not clear to what extent fishes can anticipate the actions of their interaction partners or what the underlying mechanisms are for that anticipation. To answer these questions, we let live guppies () interact repeatedly with an open-loop (noninteractive) biomimetic robot that has previously been shown to be an accepted conspecific. The robot always performed the same zigzag trajectory in the experimental tank that ended in one of the corners, giving the live fish the opportunity to learn both the location of the final destination as well as the specific turning movement of the robot over three consecutive trials. The live fish's reactions were categorized into a global anticipation, which we defined as relative time to reach the robot's final corner, and a local anticipation which was the relative time and location of the live fish's turns relative to robofish turns. As a proxy for global anticipation, we found that live fish in the last trial reached the robot's destination corner significantly earlier than the robot. Overall, more than 50% of all fish arrived at the destination before the robot. This is more than a random walk model would predict and significantly more compared to all other equidistant, yet unvisited, corners. As a proxy for local anticipation, we found fish change their turning behavior in response to the robot over the course of the trials. Initially, the fish would turn after the robot, which was reversed in the end, as they began to turn slightly before the robot in the final trial. Our results indicate that live fish are able to anticipate predictably behaving social partners both in regard to final movement locations as well as movement dynamics. Given that fish have been found to exhibit consistent behavioral differences, anticipation in fish could have evolved as a mechanism to adapt to different social interaction partners.
个体预测他人行为结果并自适应地改变自身行为的能力被称为预期。许多哺乳动物物种(包括人类)在社会环境中都表现出了预期能力,然而,鱼类在多大程度上能够预期其交互伙伴的行为,以及这种预期的潜在机制是什么,目前还不清楚。为了回答这些问题,我们让活体孔雀鱼()与一个开环(非交互)的仿生机器人反复互动,这个机器人之前已经被证明是一种可接受的同物种。机器人总是在实验水箱中以之字形轨迹运行,最终到达一个角落,这给活体鱼提供了三次连续试验的机会,让它们既了解最终目的地的位置,也了解机器人的具体转弯动作。活体鱼的反应被分为全局预期,我们将其定义为到达机器人最终角落的相对时间,以及局部预期,即活体鱼相对于机器鱼转弯的相对时间和位置。作为全局预期的一个代理,我们发现最后一次试验中的活体鱼到达机器人的目的地角落的时间明显早于机器人。总体而言,超过 50%的鱼在机器人到达目的地之前就已经到达了。这不仅仅是随机游走模型所预测的,而且比所有其他等距但未被访问的角落都要多。作为局部预期的一个代理,我们发现鱼在试验过程中会根据机器人改变它们的转弯行为。最初,鱼会在机器人之后转弯,最后则相反,因为它们在最后一次试验中开始在机器人之前稍微转弯。我们的结果表明,活体鱼能够预测可预测的行为伙伴,无论是在最终的运动位置还是在运动动态方面。鉴于鱼类已经表现出一致的行为差异,鱼类的预期能力可能已经进化为一种适应不同社交伙伴的机制。