Litcius/Paper detail

Lateralization of short- and long-term visual memories in an insect

A. Sofia D. Fernandes, Jeremy E. Niven

2020Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The formation of memories within the vertebrate brain is lateralized between hemispheres across multiple modalities. However, in invertebrates evidence for lateralization is restricted to olfactory memories, primarily from social bees. Here, we use a classical conditioning paradigm with a visual conditioned stimulus to show that visual memories are lateralized in the wood ant, Formica rufa . We show that a brief contact between a sugar reward and either the right or left antenna (reinforcement) is sufficient to produce a lateralized memory, even though the visual cue is visible to both eyes throughout training and testing. Reinforcement given to the right antenna induced short-term memories, whereas reinforcement given to the left antenna induced long-term memories. Thus, short- and long-term visual memories are lateralized in wood ants. This extends the modalities across which memories are lateralized in insects and suggests that such memory lateralization may have evolved multiple times, possibly linked to the evolution of eusociality in the Hymenoptera.

Topics & Concepts

Lateralization of brain functionStimulus (psychology)PsychologyReinforcementNeuroscienceOlfactory cuesStimulus modalityCognitive psychologySensory cueCommunicationOlfactionSensory systemSocial psychologyHemispheric Asymmetry in NeuroscienceAnimal Behavior and ReproductionPrimate Behavior and Ecology