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Review
. 2007 Aug;193(8):801-24.
doi: 10.1007/s00359-007-0235-9. Epub 2007 Jul 17.

Behavioral and neural analysis of associative learning in the honeybee: a taste from the magic well

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Review

Behavioral and neural analysis of associative learning in the honeybee: a taste from the magic well

Martin Giurfa. J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol. 2007 Aug.

Abstract

Equipped with a mini brain smaller than one cubic millimeter and containing only 950,000 neurons, honeybees could be indeed considered as having rather limited cognitive abilities. However, bees display a rich and interesting behavioral repertoire, in which learning and memory play a fundamental role in the framework of foraging activities. We focus on the question of whether adaptive behavior in honeybees exceeds simple forms of learning and whether the neural mechanisms of complex learning can be unraveled by studying the honeybee brain. Besides elemental forms of learning, in which bees learn specific and univocal links between events in their environment, bees also master different forms of non-elemental learning, including categorization, contextual learning and rule abstraction, both in the visual and in the olfactory domain. Different protocols allow accessing the neural substrates of some of these learning forms and understanding how complex problem solving can be achieved by a relatively simple neural architecture. These results underline the enormous richness of experience-dependent behavior in honeybees, its high flexibility, and the fact that it is possible to formalize and characterize in controlled laboratory protocols basic and higher-order cognitive processing using an insect as a model.

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