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Neurally underdeveloped cuttlefish newborns exhibit social learning

Authors :
Eduardo Sampaio
Vanessa M. Lopes
Catarina Ramos
Marta L Augustin
Bruna L M Bernardino
Érica Moura
Rui Rosa
Maela Bleunven
Source :
Animal Cognition. 24:23-32
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Learning can occur through self-experience with the environment, or through the observation of others. The latter allows for adaptive behaviour without trial-and-error, thus maximizing individual fitness. Perhaps given their mostly solitary lifestyle, cuttlefish have seldomly been tested under observational learning scenarios. Here we used a multi-treatment design to disentangle if and how neurally immature cuttlefish Sepia officinalis hatchlings (up to 5 days) incorporate social information into their decision-making, when performing a task where inhibition of predatory behaviour is learned. In the classical social learning treatment using pre-trained demonstrators, observers did not register any predatory behaviour. In the inhibition by social learning treatment, using naive (or sham) demonstrators, more observers than demonstrators learned the task, while also reaching learning criterion in fewer trials, and performing less number of attacks per trial. Moreover, the performance of demonstrator–observer pairs was highly correlated, indicating that the mere presence of conspecifics did not explain our results by itself. Additionally, observers always reported higher latency time to attack during trials, a trend that was reversed in the positive controls. Lastly, pre-exposure to the stimulus did not improve learning rates. Our findings reveal the vicarious capacity of these invertebrate newborns to learn modulation (inhibition) of predatory behaviour, potentially through emulation (i.e. affordance learning). Despite ongoing changes on neural organization during early ontogeny, cognitively demanding forms of learning are already present in cuttlefish newborns, facilitating behavioural adaptation at a critical life stage, and potentially improving individual fitness in the environment.

Details

ISSN :
14359456 and 14359448
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Animal Cognition
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e98b7ae047ec4b24d07140b383704552