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Efficient visual-learning by bumble bees in virtual-reality conditions: size does not matter.

Gregory LafonMarco PaoliBenjamin PaffhausenGabriela de Brito SanchezMathieu LihoreauAurore Avarguès-WeberMartin Giurfa
Published in: Insect science (2023)
Recent developments allowed establishing virtual-reality (VR) setups to study multiple aspects of visual learning in honey bees under controlled experimental conditions. Here, we adopted a VR environment to investigate the visual learning in the buff-tailed bumble bee Bombus terrestris. Based on responses to appetitive and aversive reinforcements used for conditioning, we show that bumble bees had the proper appetitive motivation to engage in the VR experiments and that they learned efficiently elemental color discriminations. In doing so, they reduced the latency to make a choice, increased the proportion of direct paths towards the virtual stimuli and walked faster towards them. Performance in a short-term retention test showed that bumble bees chose and fixated longer the correct stimulus in the absence of reinforcement. Body size and weight, though variable across individuals, did not affect cognitive performances and had a mild impact on motor performances. Overall, we show that bumble bees are suitable experimental subjects for experiments on visual learning under VR conditions, which opens important perspectives for invasive studies on the neural and molecular bases of such learning given the robustness of these insects and the accessibility of their brain. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
  • virtual reality
  • body mass index
  • physical activity
  • white matter
  • cerebral ischemia