Cockroaches Show Individuality in Learning and Memory During Classical and Operant Conditioning

2019 | journal article; research paper

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​Cockroaches Show Individuality in Learning and Memory During Classical and Operant Conditioning​
Arican, C.; Bulk, J.; Deisig, N. & Nawrot, M. P. ​ (2019) 
Frontiers in Physiology10 pp. 1539​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2019.01539 

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Authors
Arican, Cansu; Bulk, Janice; Deisig, Nina; Nawrot, Martin Paul 
Abstract
Animal personality and individuality are intensively researched in vertebrates and both concepts are increasingly applied to behavioral science in insects. However, only few studies have looked into individuality with respect to performance in learning and memory tasks. In vertebrates, individual learning capabilities vary considerably with respect to learning speed and learning rate. Likewise, honeybees express individual learning abilities in a wide range of classical conditioning protocols. Here, we study individuality in the learning and memory performance of cockroaches, both in classical and operant conditioning tasks. We implemented a novel classical (olfactory) conditioning paradigm where the conditioned response is established in the maxilla-labia response (MLR). Operant spatial learning was investigated in a forced two-choice task using a T-maze. Our results confirm individual learning abilities in classical conditioning of cockroaches that was reported for honeybees and vertebrates but contrast long-standing reports on stochastic learning behavior in fruit flies. In our experiments, most learners expressed a correct behavior after only a single learning trial showing a consistent high performance during training and test. We can further show that individual learning differences in insects are not limited to classical conditioning but equally appear in operant conditioning of the cockroach.
Issue Date
2019
Journal
Frontiers in Physiology 
Project
FOR 2705: Dissection of a Brain Circuit: Structure, Plasticity and Behavioral Function of the Drosophila Mushroom Body 
FOR 2705 | TP 4: From molecular computation to adaptive behavior: Across level modeling of memory computation in the mushroom bodies 
Working Group
RG Nawrot 
ISSN
1664-042X
Language
English

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