Honey bees selectively avoid difficult choices.

Clint J Perry, Andrew B Barron
Author Information
  1. Clint J Perry: Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia.

Abstract

Human decision-making strategies are strongly influenced by an awareness of certainty or uncertainty (a form of metacognition) to increase the chances of making a right choice. Humans seek more information and defer choosing when they realize they have insufficient information to make an accurate decision, but whether animals are aware of uncertainty is currently highly contentious. To explore this issue, we examined how Honey Bees (Apis mellifera) responded to a visual discrimination task that varied in difficulty between trials. Free-flying Bees were rewarded for a correct choice, punished for an incorrect choice, or could avoid choosing by exiting the trial (opting out). Bees opted out more often on difficult trials, and opting out improved their proportion of successful trials. Bees could also transfer the concept of opting out to a novel task. Our data show that Bees selectively avoid difficult tasks they lack the information to solve. This finding has been considered as evidence that nonhuman animals can assess the certainty of a predicted outcome, and Bees' performance was comparable to that of primates in a similar paradigm. We discuss whether these behavioral results prove Bees react to uncertainty or whether associative mechanisms can explain such findings. To better frame metacognition as an issue for neurobiological investigation, we propose a neurobiological hypothesis of uncertainty monitoring based on the known circuitry of the honey bee brain.

Keywords

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MeSH Term

Analysis of Variance
Animals
Association Learning
Bees
Choice Behavior
Decision Making
Discrimination, Psychological
Uncertainty

Word Cloud

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