Detalhes do Documento

Brain morphology predicts social intelligence in wild cleaner fish

Autor(es): Triki, Zegni ; Emery, Yasmin ; Teles, Magda C ; Oliveira, Rui Filipe ; Bshary, Redouan

Data: 2020

Identificador Persistente: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.12/7918

Origem: Repositório do ISPA - Instituto Universitário

Assunto(s): Animals; Animals, Wild; Behavior, Animal; Brain; Cell Count; Cerebellum; Fishes; Organ Size; Population Density; Prosencephalon; Emotional Intelligence


Descrição

It is generally agreed that variation in social and/or environmental complexity yields variation in selective pressures on brain anatomy, where more complex brains should yield increased intelligence. While these insights are based on many evolutionary studies, it remains unclear how ecology impacts brain plasticity and subsequently cognitive performance within a species. Here, we show that in wild cleaner fish (Labroides dimidiatus), forebrain size of high-performing individuals tested in an ephemeral reward task covaried positively with cleaner density, while cerebellum size covaried negatively with cleaner density. This unexpected relationship may be explained if we consider that performance in this task reflects the decision rules that individuals use in nature rather than learning abilities: cleaners with relatively larger forebrains used decision-rules that appeared to be locally optimal. Thus, social competence seems to be a suitable proxy of intelligence to understand individual differences under natural conditions.

Tipo de Documento Artigo científico
Idioma Inglês
Contribuidor(es) Repositório do ISPA
Licença CC
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