Tomer J Czaczkes, Anja Berger, Alexandra Koch, Gesine Dreisbach
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We developed task-mimicking aspects of the Stroop color-word test, in which ants must learn to follow a neutral cue (a scent) on a Y maze but ignore a dominant and innately meaningful signal (a pheromone trail). The pheromone can be congruent with the scent cue (lead to the same maze arm) or be incongruent. Both accuracy and task-solving latency suffered when the information sources were incongruent. There was no evidence of congruency sequence effects. Because of limitations of the experimental design, we cannot rule out that insects would also show a congruency sequence effect under a different experimental paradigm. Although the methodology is not directly comparable to human studies, the presence of clear conflict interference suggests parallels between insect and human information processing, in spite of completely different brains. This powerful and straightforward methodology opens the possibility of exploring conflict interference in the presence of prepotent response tendencies in an invertebrate model. We hope this work encourages the field of response competition to use the vast literature on response competition in animal behavior studies. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
当正确的目标一致反应弱于不正确的替代反应时,就会发生反应冲突。为了克服反应冲突,必须抑制较强的反应,这使得反应冲突的研究成为高阶认知的一个重要研究课题。响应冲突通常会导致冲突干扰——错误率和响应时间的增加。在这里,我们想知道一种无脊椎动物——蚂蚁——是否可以解决这种反应冲突,如果可以,它是否会受到冲突干扰。我们还询问蚂蚁是否表现出一致性序列效应,当冲突重复时,受试者表现出短暂的减少冲突推理。我们开发了Stroop颜色单词测试的任务模仿方面,在这个测试中,蚂蚁必须学会在Y形迷宫中遵循中性线索(气味),但忽略显性和天生有意义的信号(信息素轨迹)。信息素可以与气味线索一致(导致同一迷宫手臂),也可以不一致。当信息源不一致时,准确性和任务解决延迟都会受到影响。不存在一致性序列效应。由于实验设计的限制,我们不能排除昆虫在不同的实验范式下也会表现出相同的序列效应。尽管该方法不能直接与人类研究相比较,但存在明显的冲突干扰表明,昆虫和人类的信息处理有相似之处,尽管它们的大脑完全不同。这种强大而直接的方法为探索无脊椎动物模型中存在优势反应倾向的冲突干扰提供了可能性。我们希望这项工作能够鼓励反应竞争领域在动物行为研究中利用大量关于反应竞争的文献。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA,版权所有)。
Response conflicts occur when the correct goal-congruent response is weaker than an alternative but incorrect response. To overcome response conflicts, the stronger response has to be inhibited, making the study of response conflicts an important research topic in higher order cognition. Response conflicts often result in conflict interference-an increase in error rates and response times. Here, we ask whether an invertebrate-the ant, Lasius niger-can solve such response conflicts and, if so, whether it suffers from conflict interference. We also ask whether ants show congruency sequence effects, where subjects show transiently reduced conflict inference when conflicts repeat. We developed task-mimicking aspects of the Stroop color-word test, in which ants must learn to follow a neutral cue (a scent) on a Y maze but ignore a dominant and innately meaningful signal (a pheromone trail). The pheromone can be congruent with the scent cue (lead to the same maze arm) or be incongruent. Both accuracy and task-solving latency suffered when the information sources were incongruent. There was no evidence of congruency sequence effects. Because of limitations of the experimental design, we cannot rule out that insects would also show a congruency sequence effect under a different experimental paradigm. Although the methodology is not directly comparable to human studies, the presence of clear conflict interference suggests parallels between insect and human information processing, in spite of completely different brains. This powerful and straightforward methodology opens the possibility of exploring conflict interference in the presence of prepotent response tendencies in an invertebrate model. We hope this work encourages the field of response competition to use the vast literature on response competition in animal behavior studies. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Comparative Psychology publishes original research from a comparative perspective
on the behavior, cognition, perception, and social relationships of diverse species.