| Literature DB >> 22905113 |
Will Hoppitt1, Jamie Samson, Kevin N Laland, Alex Thornton.
Abstract
Vigorous debates as to the evolutionary origins of culture remain unresolved due to an absence of methods for identifying learning mechanisms in natural populations. While laboratory experiments on captive animals have revealed evidence for a number of mechanisms, these may not necessarily reflect the processes typically operating in nature. We developed a novel method that allows social and asocial learning mechanisms to be determined in animal groups from the patterns of interaction with, and solving of, a task. We deployed it to analyse learning in groups of wild meerkats (Suricata suricatta) presented with a novel foraging apparatus. We identify nine separate learning processes underlying the meerkats' foraging behaviour, in each case precisely quantifying their strength and duration, including local enhancement, emulation, and a hitherto unrecognized form of social learning, which we term 'observational perseverance'. Our analysis suggests a key factor underlying the stability of behavioural traditions is a high ratio of specific to generalized social learning effects. The approach has widespread potential as an ecologically valid tool to investigate learning mechanisms in natural groups of animals, including humans.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22905113 PMCID: PMC3414518 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0042044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Experimental setup and model structure.
A) A “Box”. The “Flap” technique involved going through a black cat flap to obtain food from a pot; the “Tube” technique involved pushing through a fabric sleeve on the tube and breaking a paper lid to obtain food; B) experimental layout of the two identical Boxes; C) diagrammatic representation of the stochastic mechanism-fitting model (SMFM) showing the three rates of transition that were modelled. In reality ‘rate of interaction’ involved modelling four ‘competing’ transition rates, to each of the four options available: left Flap, right Flap, left Tube and right Tube. We recorded an individual as solving the task when it gained access to food inside the box, and as abandoning the task when it terminated a bout of interaction without gaining access to food inside the box.
Figure 2Diagrammatic representation of all effects found.
Each effect is described and interpreted in Table 1. The positioning of the arrow for each effect represents the transition rate affected. Green arrows mean a rate of transition was found to be a function of an individual’s previous manipulations of the task, interpreted as asocial learning or changes in motivation. Red arrows mean a rate of transition was found to be a function of the number of previous observations, interpreted as direct social learning. The blue arrow indicates the rate of interaction was found to be a function of the time since last observation at each option, interpreted as a transient local enhancement effect. + or - indicates whether the transition rate was positively or negatively associated with the variable in question.
Summary of effects found on meerkats’ task solving behaviour, and our interpretation.
| Label in | Description of effect | Interpretation |
| 1 | Rate of interaction positively associated with number ofprevious successful interactions. Option-type specific. | Asocial learning. Interaction with an option-type is reinforced by successful interactions – a straightforward case of operant conditioning. |
| 2 | Rate of interaction positively associated with number ofprevious observations of conspecifics gaining entry to the box.Only weak evidence the effect is option-type specific.See | Direct social learning. Not consistent with learning an association of the Box with food (‘observational conditioning’, sensu Heyes 1994), since seeing another individual feeding in box was not sufficient for the effect to occur. Perhaps individuals learned it was possible to get into the box, a case of emulation. |
| 3 | Rate of interaction higher in the period immediately afterobservation of a conspecific manipulating the task. Some effect onall options, but much stronger on the specific option observedto be manipulated, for younger meerkats. See | Local enhancement: Observation of others manipulating the task transiently draws the observers to that location. The effect was more spatially specific for younger meerkats. See |
| 4 | Rate of abandonment lower for individuals whohad previously solved the task. Option-type specific. | Asocial learning: interaction with an option-type is reinforced by a first successful interaction. |
| 5 | Rate of abandonment negatively associated with the numberof previous unsuccessful attempts to manipulate the task.Option-type general. | Individuals with more previous failures are hungrier, so more highly motivated to succeed once they start manipulating the task. |
| 6 | After accounting for effect 4, rate of abandonment positivelyassociated with the number of previous successful attemptsto manipulate the task. Option-type general. | Individuals with fewer previous successes are hungrier, so more highly motivated to succeed once they start manipulating the task, whilst individuals that have successfully retrieved lots of food become satiated. |
| 7 | Rate of abandonment negatively associated with the numberof previous observations of conspecifics gaining entry tothe box and feeding. Option-type general. | Direct social learning: observation of others solving the task caused meerkats to persevere with the task for longer during bouts of interaction. We term this ‘observational perseverance’. |
| 8 | Rate of solving higher for individuals who had previouslysolved the task. Option-type specific. | Asocial learning: the actions required to solve the task using a specific option-type are reinforced. Another instance of operant conditioning. |
| 9 | Rate of solving positively associated with the number ofprevious unsuccessful attempts to manipulate the task.Option-type specific. | Asocial learning: reinforcement of actions leading closer to task solution and/or punishment of actions not leading closer to task solution. Another instance of operant conditioning. |
See also Fig. 2.
Figure 3Estimated transient effects.
A) Estimated size of the transient increase in rate of interaction at each option immediately following observation, for different age classes of meerkats (taken from the final model). These effects are decomposed into B) box-level local enhancement, influencing rate of interaction with both options at the manipulated box; and C) specific local enhancement, further influencing rate of interaction with the manipulated option. Estimates are the median of the posterior distribution, scaled relative to the estimated median baseline rate of interaction with the flap option. Error bars give the 95% highest posterior density (HPD) interval. Green points and error bars give the estimates of the difference in effect size between different age classes, where A = adult; J/SA = juveniles and sub-adults; P = pups.
Figure 4Group differences in manipulations of the flap and tube.
A) The number of manipulations of the flap and tube; B) the number of successful manipulations of the flap and tube; C) the proportion of individuals that manipulated the flap and tube; and D) the proportion of individuals solving the task using the flap and tube. Trained demonstrators are not included in all cases. Letter codes refer to different groups.
Figure 5Specificity of the transient social effect for different age classes for the current study and the previous experiment by Thornton and Malapert [.
Specificity quantifies the probability a naive observer will use the same option-type it has observed, given that it manipulates one of them immediately after observation. The mean of the posterior sample is shown in each case, with the 95% central interval. * Indicates that the 95% central interval for the difference between the two studies did not include zero, whereas NS signifies that it did.