From Bhambore et al., in the June 4 issue of Science Magazine:
Editor’s summary
Recent
research has revealed that bumble bees are much more cognitively
advanced than previously thought: They play with balls, count, recognize
faces, and even feel rhythm. However, it has not been shown that they
could achieve one of the highest peaks of cognitive performance: the
ability to spontaneously solve a problem. Bhambore et al. tested
this ability by providing bees with a ball that could be used as a tool
to reach an otherwise unreachable flower reward. Bees that had been
allowed to play with a ball and experience the flower spontaneously
learned to move the ball to access the flower when they were present
together. —Sacha Vignieri
Abstract
Problem-solving
using novel solutions without explicit training is often considered a
hallmark of cognitive flexibility. We investigated whether bumble bees (Bombus terrestris)
could solve a novel object manipulation task spontaneously. Bees
trained to associate a blue ring (“flower”) on the floor with a reward
successfully moved a ball underneath a flower relocated to the ceiling
to reach the flower. In control experiments in which the flower was out
of sight when ball movement began and remained hidden during transport,
bees still succeeded in the task. These results suggest that these were
goal-directed actions rather than reinforcement-based associations
driven by perceptual feedback. Our findings provide evidence that bumble
bees can exhibit spontaneous problem-solving, challenging the notion
that such advanced cognitive abilities are exclusive to large-brained
vertebrates.
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