Abstract
Many animals acquire biologically important information from conspecifics. Social learning has been demonstrated in many animals, but there are few experimental paradigms that are suitable for detailed analysis of its associative processes. We established procedures for appetitive and aversive social learning with living and dead conspecifics in well-controlled stimulus arrangements in crickets, Gryllus bimaculatus. A thirsty demonstrator cricket was released in a demonstrator room and allowed to visit two drinking apparatuses that contained water or saltwater and emitted apple or banana odour, and a thirsty learner was allowed to observe the demonstrator room through a net. In the post-training test, the learner preferred the odour of the water-containing apparatus at which the demonstrator stayed. When a dead cricket was placed on one of the two apparatuses, the learner avoided the odour of that apparatus. Further experiments suggested that a living conspecific can be recognized by either visual or olfactory cues for appetitive social learning, whereas olfactory cues are needed to recognize a dead conspecific for aversive social learning, and that different associative processes underlie social learning with living and dead conspecifics. The experimental paradigms described here will pave the way for detailed research on the neural basis of social learning.
Highlights
Many animals acquire biologically important information from conspecifics
Most of social learning trainings in this study were performed in a training arena, which consisted of a demonstrator room and a learner room separated by a plastic net (Fig. 1A)
A demonstrator cricket was placed in a demonstrator room and allowed to freely visit two drinking apparatuses (Fig. 1B) containing water or saltwater and emitting apple or banana odour, and a learner cricket was placed in a learner room and allowed to observe the behaviour of the demonstrator through a net for 8 min (For details of the procedures, see Materials and Methods)
Summary
Social learning has been demonstrated in many animals, but there are few experimental paradigms that are suitable for detailed analysis of its associative processes. A thirsty cricket (demonstrator) was allowed to freely visit two drinking apparatuses that contained water or saltwater and emitted apple or banana odour (counterbalanced). Another thirsty cricket (learner) was allowed to observe the demonstrator’s room through a net. We further investigated sensory cues necessary to recognize a living or dead conspecific and possible associative processes underlying appetitive or aversive social learning in crickets, which will provide a basis for future studies on neural mechanisms of social learning
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