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Foraging as an ethological framework for neuroscience

Laura L. Grima, Hannah Haberkern, Rishika Mohanta, Mai M Morimoto, Adithya E. Rajagopalan, Emma V Scholey

2025Trends in Neurosciences8 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The study of foraging is central to a renewed interest in naturalistic behavior in neuroscience. Applying a foraging framework grounded in behavioral ecology has enabled probing of the mechanisms underlying cognitive processes such as decision-making within a more ecological context. Yet, foraging also involves myriad other aspects, including navigation of complex environments, sensory processing, and social interactions. Here, we first provide a brief overview of the neuroscience of foraging decisions, and then combine insights from behavioral ecology and neuroscience to review the role of these additional dimensions of foraging. We conclude by highlighting four opportunities for the continued development of foraging as an ethological framework for neuroscience: integrating normative and implementation-level models, developing new tools, enabling cross-species comparisons, and fostering interdisciplinary collaboration.

Topics & Concepts

ForagingPsychologyBehavioural sciencesCognitive scienceNeuroscienceNormativeCognitionEcologyBehavioral ecologyBehavioral neuroscienceEthologyCognitive psychologySocial neuroscienceEcological validitySensory systemAnimal behaviorMemory and Neural MechanismsNeuroscience, Education and Cognitive FunctionChild and Animal Learning Development
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