Bumblebees Use Sequential Scanning of Countable Items in Visual Patterns to Solve Numerosity Tasks

Author:

MaBouDi HaDi1,Galpayage Dona H Samadi1,Gatto Elia2,Loukola Olli J1,Buckley Emma13,Onoufriou Panayiotis D1,Skorupski Peter4,Chittka Lars15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, London E1 4NS, UK

2. Department of General Psychology, University of Padova, 35131 Padova, Italy

3. Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, UK

4. Institute of Medical and Biomedical Education, St George’s, University of London, London SW17 0RE, UK

5. Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin—Institute for Advanced Study, Wallotstrasse 19, 14193 Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Most research in comparative cognition focuses on measuring if animals manage certain tasks; fewer studies explore how animals might solve them. We investigated bumblebees’ scanning strategies in a numerosity task, distinguishing patterns with two items from four and one from three, and subsequently transferring numerical information to novel numbers, shapes, and colors. Video analyses of flight paths indicate that bees do not determine the number of items by using a rapid assessment of number (as mammals do in “subitizing”); instead, they rely on sequential enumeration even when items are presented simultaneously and in small quantities. This process, equivalent to the motor tagging (“pointing”) found for large number tasks in some primates, results in longer scanning times for patterns containing larger numbers of items. Bees used a highly accurate working memory, remembering which items have already been scanned, resulting in fewer than 1% of re-inspections of items before making a decision. Our results indicate that the small brain of bees, with less parallel processing capacity than mammals, might constrain them to use sequential pattern evaluation even for low quantities.

Funder

EPSRC

HFSP

ERC Advanced Grant SpaceRadarPollinator

Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Animal Science and Zoology

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5. Honeybees use absolute rather than relative numerosity in number discrimination;Bortot;Biol Lett,2019

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