Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, 202 Life Sciences Bldg, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2022 Sep 15;225(18). doi: 10.1242/jeb.244548. Epub 2022 Sep 27.
Animals evolve mechanisms to send and receive communication signals through multiple sensory channels during crucial behavioral contexts such as aggression and reproduction. This ensures the transmission of important context-dependent signals that supply either the same (redundant) or different (non-redundant) information to the receiver. Despite the importance of multimodal communication, there are relatively few species in which information on sender signals and receiver responses are known. Further, little is known about where context-dependent unimodal and multimodal information is processed in the brain to produce adaptive behaviors. We used the African cichlid, Astatotilapia burtoni, to investigate how unimodal and multimodal signals are processed within the female brain in a reproductive context. During courtship, dominant males produce low frequency sounds in conjunction with visual displays (quivers) directed towards receptive gravid females. We compared affiliation behaviors and neural activation patterns in gravid females exposed to visual, acoustic and visual-acoustic signals from courting dominant males. Females displayed reduced affiliation in auditory-only conditions, but similar affiliation during visual and visual-acoustic conditions, demonstrating that visual-acoustic signaling from males is non-redundant but vision dominates. Using the neural activation marker cfos, we identified differential activation in specific socially relevant brain nuclei between unimodal and multimodal conditions and distinct neural co-activation networks associated with each sensory context. Combined with our previous work on chemosensory signaling, we propose that A. burtoni represents a valuable vertebrate model for studying context-dependent behavioral and neural decision making associated with non-redundant multimodal communication.
动物在关键的行为情境中(如攻击和繁殖)会进化出通过多种感觉通道发送和接收通讯信号的机制。这确保了重要的上下文相关信号的传递,这些信号为接收者提供相同(冗余)或不同(非冗余)的信息。尽管多模态通讯很重要,但已知信息的发送者信号和接收者反应的物种相对较少。此外,关于上下文相关的单模态和多模态信息在大脑中何处被处理以产生适应性行为,人们知之甚少。我们使用非洲丽鱼 Astatotilapia burtoni 来研究在繁殖背景下,单模态和多模态信号如何在雌性大脑中被处理。在求偶期间,优势雄性会发出低频声音,并与面向接受性妊娠雌性的视觉展示(颤动)一起发出声音。我们比较了妊娠雌性在暴露于来自求偶优势雄性的视觉、听觉和视听信号时的亲和行为和神经激活模式。雌性在仅听觉条件下表现出较低的亲和性,但在视觉和视听条件下表现出相似的亲和性,表明来自雄性的视听信号是非冗余的,但视觉占主导地位。使用神经激活标记物 cfos,我们在单模态和多模态条件之间识别出特定于社会相关的大脑核中的差异激活,以及与每个感觉环境相关的不同的神经共同激活网络。结合我们以前关于化学感觉信号的工作,我们提出 A. burtoni 代表了研究与非冗余多模态通讯相关的上下文相关行为和神经决策的有价值的脊椎动物模型。