Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Takeyama Tomohiro
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 6000026214
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

The use of multiple sources of social information in contest behavior: testing the social cognitive abilities of a cichlid fish.

Bibliography Type

Author

Hotta T, Takeyama T, Heg D, Awata S, Jordan LA and Kohda M

Summary

Theory suggests that living in large social groups with dynamic social interactions often favors the evolution of enhanced cognitive abilities. Studies of how animals assess their own contest ability commonly focus on a single cognitive task, and little is known about the diversity or co-occurrence of cognitive abilities in social species. We examined how a highly social cichlid fish Julidochromis transcriptus uses four major cognitive abilities in contest situations; direct experience, winner/loser effects, social eavesdropping and transitive inference (TI). We conducted experiments in which fish assessed the social status of rivals after either direct physical contests or observed contests. Individuals used direct information from a previous physical encounter to re-establish dominance without additional contact, but winner/loser effects were not observed. Social eavesdropping alone was ruled out, but we found that transitive reasoning was used to infer social dominance of other individuals of unknown status. Our results suggest that in stable hierarchical social groups, estimations of contest ability, based on individual recognition pathways such as TI and direct experience, are more prevalent than social eavesdropping or winner/loser effects. We suggest that advanced cognitive abilities might be widespread among highly social fishes, but have previously gone undetected.

Magazine(name)

Front. Ecol. Evol

Publisher

Volume

3

Number Of Pages

85

StartingPage

EndingPage

Date of Issue

2015/08

Referee

Exist

Invited

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

DOI

https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2015.00085

NAID

PMID

URL

J-GLOBAL ID

arXiv ID

ORCID Put Code

DBLP ID