Literature DB >> 19513269

Learning, specialization, efficiency and task allocation in social insects.

Lars Chittka1, Helene Muller.   

Abstract

One of the most spectacular features of social insect colonies is their division of labor. Although individuals are often totipotent in terms of the labor they might perform, they might persistently work as scouts, fighters, nurses, foragers, undertakers or cleaners with a repetitiveness that might resemble an assembly line worker in a factory. Perhaps because of this apparent analogy, researchers have often assumed a priori that such labor division must be efficient, but empirical proof is scarce. New work on Themnothorax ants shows that there might be no link between an individual's propensity to perform a task, and their efficiency at that task, nor are task specialists more efficient than generalists. Here we argue that learning psychology might provide the missing link between social insect task specialization and efficiency: just like in human societies, efficiency at a job specialty is only partially a result of "talent", or innate tendency to engage in a job: it is much more a result of perfecting skills with experience, and the extent to which experience can be carried over from one task to the next (transfer), or whether experience at one task might actually impair performance at another (interference). Indeed there is extensive circumstantial evidence that learning is involved in almost any task performed by social insect workers, including food type recognition and handling techniques, but also such seemingly basic tasks as nest building and climate control. New findings on Cerapachys ants indicate that early experience of success at a task might to some extent determine the "profession" an insect worker chooses in later life.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ants; bees; cerapachys; cognition; interference; themnothorax; transfer

Year:  2009        PMID: 19513269      PMCID: PMC2686371          DOI: 10.4161/cib.7600

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Commun Integr Biol        ISSN: 1942-0889


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