| Literature DB >> 23155394 |
David H Reser1, Randika Wijesekara Witharanage, Marcello G P Rosa, Adrian G Dyer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent studies on colour discrimination suggest that experience is an important factor in how a visual system processes spectral signals. In insects it has been shown that differential conditioning is important for processing fine colour discriminations. However, the visual system of many insects, including the honeybee, has a complex set of neural pathways, in which input from the long wavelength sensitive ('green') photoreceptor may be processed either as an independent achromatic signal or as part of a trichromatic opponent-colour system. Thus, a potential confound of colour learning in insects is the possibility that modulation of the 'green' photoreceptor could underlie observations. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23155394 PMCID: PMC3498261 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0048577
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Testing of honeybee colour vision.
(a) Schematic diagram of Y-maze apparatus used to test free flying bees. LED array position was varied between experimental trials (see Methods). (b) Example of an absolute irradiance spectra measurement for LED stimulus arrays. Inset shows spectral sensitivity for long- (grey circle), medium- (open circle), and short- (black circle) wavelength sensitive photoreceptors in honeybees. Colour bar indicates approximate perceived colour range in humans. Adapted from Dyer et al., 2011 using the data for honeybees from Peitsch et al. 1992. (c) Plots of LED stimuli in a Maxwell triangle colour model representing the trichromatic (ultraviolet, UV; blue, B; green, G) colour vision of honeybees. Spectral loci show theoretical stimulation by spectrally pure radiation.
Colour distance in a Maxwell colour triangle for ‘colour’ stimuli that are only learnt by free flying honeybees that experience differential conditioning.
| Study | Stimulus pair | Triangle colour distance |
| Giurfa 2004 | HKS 37N vs 43N | 0.089 |
| Avarguès-Weber et. al 2010 | HKS 43N vs 47N | 0.071 |
| Avarguès-Weber et. al 2010 | HKS3N vs 68N | 0.084 |
| Dyer & Murphy 2009 | Similar ‘blues’ | 0.043 |
| Current | 414 vs 424 nm | 0.039 |
The stimuli used in the current study are more perceptually similar than previous studies.
Chromaticity coordinates (uv, b, g) which are the normalised photoreceptor quantum catches [P(UV, Blue, Green)] for a given stimulus such that uv+b+g = 1.0.
| Stimulus |
|
|
|
|
| 0.136 | 0.752 | 0.112 |
|
| 0.079 | 0.801 | 0.120 |
Figure 2Colour learning in honeybees with differential conditioning.
(a) Acquisition curves for LED colour discrimination over 50 trials. Mean ± SEM of correct choice frequency for each 5-trial block. (b). Unrewarded touch test performance following 50 trial training interval for neutral (W: water) and aversive (Q: quinine) distractor stimuli. Mean ± SD correct touch frequency. Note that the Y-axis in each panel is abbreviated to enhance visibility. Red dotted lines indicate expected chance performance level (50%) bee choices following differential conditioning were significantly different from chance (see text for stats). In the touch tests the mean number of choices made by bees was 29.4±1.4 SEM.