Socially acquired information reduces Norway rats' latencies to find food
نویسندگان
چکیده
Experiments have demonstrated that socially acquired information influences both where Norway rats, Rattus norvegicuslook for food and what foods they eat. The present studies were undertaken to determine whether rats could also use information acquired from conspecifics to determine when food had become available. Naive rats introduced either into colonies that had been trained to come to a feeding site when food was made available there or into colonies lacking such training. The former naive animals began to feed on introduced food with significantly shorter latencies than did the latter. Naive rats tended to leave a shelter they shared with others and travel to a feeding site after interacting at the shelter with a returning successful forager, but not after interacting there with a returning unsuccessful forager. Furthermore, naive rats that had been trained to eat a food, but not naive rats trained to avoid eating the same food, left shelter and went to a feeding site after interacting in the shelter with a returning forager that had eaten the food that naive rats had been trained either to eat or to avoid. All results were consistent with the view that naive colony members could learn that food had become available at a familiar feeding site by interacting with colony members that had recently eaten there.1997The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour
منابع مشابه
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متن کاملBennett G. Galef
Bennett Galef is Emeritus Professor in the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, where he has been a member of faculty since 1968, the year he received his Ph.D. in comparative and physiological psychology from the University of Pennsylvania. His doctoral thesis on the role of stimulus novelty in eliciting aggressive behaviour of wild ...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Animal behaviour
دوره 54 3 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1997