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References
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[1]
Cognition in insects - PMC - PubMed Central - NIHA traditional view of cognition is that it involves an internal process that represents, tracks or predicts an external process.
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[2]
Interpreting insect behavior through the lens of executive functionsAug 4, 2025 · We argue that insect cognition can be productively reconsidered using the EF framework. Many behaviors documented in the literature align with ...
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[3]
What is really social about social insect cognition? - FrontiersHere, we review recent advances in insect cognition research and ask whether we can identify cognitive capacities that are specific to social species.
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[4]
Wouldn't hurt a fly? A review of insect cognition and sentience in ...In this review, we explore a fraction of what is currently known about insect sentience and cognition by focusing on a portion of the published scientific ...
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[5]
Cognition and learning | Insect Behavior - Oxford AcademicIt begins with a brief review of insects' sophisticated cognition, defined as the neuronal processes concerned with the acquisition, retention, and use of ...
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[6]
Learning and cognition in insects - Wiley Interdisciplinary ReviewsMar 21, 2015 · Insects possess small brains but exhibit sophisticated behavioral performances. Recent works have reported the existence of unsuspected ...
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[7]
[PDF] Advanced cognition in ants - Myrmecological NewsFeb 23, 2022 · Review Article. ISSN 1997-3500 ... This review aims to collate the often disparate research on advanced cognition in ants.
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[8]
Editorial: The Mechanisms of Insect Cognition - FrontiersThe specific brain regions, neural circuits and genes allowing behavioral complexity in insects are explored in several contributions. The role of inhibitory ...
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[9]
How the insect brain keeps track of space - PubMedSep 16, 2025 · Insects navigate by integrating a geocentric velocity vector, allowing them to track their position relative to a distant nest. Recent ...Missing: expansions executive functions sentience 2020 review
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[10]
The cognitive map debate in insects: A historical perspective on ...Tolman argued learning was responsible for sophisticated behaviors ... More obviously, he has also extended Tolman's cognitive map hypothesis to insects.
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[11]
Editorial: The Mechanisms of Insect Cognition - PMCNov 21, 2019 · Insects have miniature brains, but recent discoveries have upturned historic views of what is possible with their seemingly simple nervous ...
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[12]
[PDF] Karl von Frisch - Nobel LectureIts great diversity and strict species specificity communicate a truly charming scent language. Page 3. Page 4. Decoding the Language of the Bee.
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[13]
(PDF) Learning and Memory in the Honeybee - ResearchGateLearning in honeybees has been studied tion and measurement (Erber, 1978; Menfor the most part in freely moving subjects zel, Erber, & Masuhr, 1974; Mercer & ...
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[14]
I Believe I Can Fly!: Use of Drosophila as a Model Organism ... - NatureOct 30, 2015 · The field of Drosophila neurogenetics has changed dramatically over the past 20 years. The focus of most of this research community used to be ...
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[15]
Entomologists' knowledge of, and attitudes towards, insect welfare in ...Dec 19, 2024 · A review of recent research on insect neurobiology and behaviour suggests there is a realistic possibility of sentience in at least some ...
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[16]
Solving a Mystery 60 Years Old: How Insect Vision Detects MotionNov 17, 2021 · Rudy Behnia, PhD, researches how sensory information is encoded within the fly brain, which is simpler to study than the brains of many other ...Missing: compound seminal
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[17]
Insect olfaction from model systems to disease control - PNASJul 11, 2011 · Insects sense the volatile chemical world with antennae (Fig. 1). Additional organs such as maxillary palps also detect odors in many species.Insect Olfaction From Model... · Mechanisms Of Insect... · Olfaction In Vector Insects
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[18]
Mechanosensation and adaptive motor control in insects - PMCHere, we review our current understanding of mechanosensation in insects and its role in adaptive motor control.
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[19]
Nano-architecture of gustatory chemosensory bristles and trachea in ...Sep 18, 2015 · The short and robust bristles are part of the mechanoreceptor sensilla, whose main role consists of sensing mechanical information such as touch ...
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[20]
Integration of Visual and Olfactory Cues in Host Plant Identification ...Phytophagous insects discriminate and recognize host plants and mates based on multiple cues, such as odor (olfactory cues), color, size and shape (visual cues) ...
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[21]
Multimodal processing of noisy cues in bumblebees - ScienceDirectJan 19, 2024 · Across species, studies have shown that multisensory integration of visual and olfactory cues can improve response accuracy. However, in ...
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[22]
Bioinspired figure-ground discrimination via visual motion smoothingApr 21, 2023 · Flies are capable of discriminating an object from its background based on relative motion cues alone, despite the inherently low spatial ...
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[23]
Polarised moonlight guides nocturnal bull ants home - eLifeDec 9, 2024 · We demonstrate that these bull ants use polarised moonlight to navigate home during the night, by rotating the overhead polarisation pattern above homing ants.
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[24]
A neuromorphic model of active vision shows how spatiotemporal ...Jul 1, 2025 · This study highlights how spatiotemporal coding in the lobula efficiently compresses visual features, offering broader insights into active vision strategies.
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[25]
Classical conditioning of proboscis extension in honeybees (Apis ...Extension of the proboscis was conditioned in restrained honeybees with odor as the conditioned stimulus (CS) and sucrose solution--delivered to the antenna.Missing: reflex | Show results with:reflex
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[26]
Spontaneous decisions and operant conditioning in fruit fliesIn an operant learning situation using visual stimuli for flies, world-learning inhibits self-learning via a prominent neuropil region, the mushroom-bodies.
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[27]
Learning and memory in disease vector insects - PMC - NIHLearning and memory plays an important role in host preference and parasite transmission by disease vector insects.
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[28]
Rapid Consolidation to a radish and Protein Synthesis-Dependent ...Mar 19, 2008 · A single 2 min training session pairing odor with a more ethologically relevant sugar reinforcement forms long-term appetitive memory that lasts for days.
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[29]
Redefining Single-Trial Memories in the Honeybee - ScienceDirectFeb 25, 2020 · On the contrary, short-term memory (STM) decays rapidly over time and does not require protein synthesis. The mechanisms mediating these two ...
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[30]
A comparative analysis of colour preferences in temperate and ... - NIHJan 2, 2018 · We use a comparative approach to investigate spontaneous and learned colour preferences in foraging bees of two tropical and one temperate species.
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[31]
Time is honey: circadian clocks of bees and flowers and how their ...Oct 9, 2017 · Forager honeybees can learn to arrive at a specified location at any time of the day and can learn as many as nine time points with intervals of ...
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[32]
Learning and Memory in the Honeybee - Journal of NeuroscienceIn all experiments, groups of bees were trained in parallel, the number of subjects in each group ranged from 20-40 (after Menzel, 1990). respond with ...
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[33]
oskar acts with the transcription factor Creb to regulate long ... - PNASWe provide experimental evidence that the unique insect-specific oskar gene plays a role in long-term memory through expression in adult neural stem cells.
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[34]
A memory transcriptome time course reveals essential long-term ...Oct 29, 2025 · Induction of a dominant negative CREB transgene specifically blocks long-term memory in Drosophila. Cell 79, 49–58 (1994). Article CAS ...
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[35]
Insect Flight: Navigating with Smooth Turns and Quick SaccadesOct 23, 2017 · A new study shows that flying Drosophila prefer steady turns when following moving panoramas, but switch overwhelmingly to quick, intermittent body saccades ...
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[36]
The influence of saccades on yaw gaze stabilization in fly flightSimilar to human eyes, flies generate smooth movement and saccades to stabilize and shift their gaze, respectively. Together, these two motor outputs are ...
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[37]
Mechanisms of punctuated vision in fly flightJul 29, 2021 · Functionally, head-reset saccades in insects prevent the head from reaching its anatomical limit during smooth movement gaze stabilization, ...
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[38]
Innate Recognition of Pheromone and Food Odors in MothsWhile pheromonal stimuli are the gold standard for innate, olfaction-based attraction and discrimination, naive moths are also innately attracted to the scent ...
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[39]
Activation of pheromone-sensitive olfactory neurons by plant ...Nov 21, 2022 · In moths, mate finding relies on female-emitted sex pheromones that the males have to decipher within a complex environmental odorant background ...
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[40]
Pheromone responsiveness threshold depends on temporal ... - PNASThe extreme sensitivity of male moths to female pheromones arises from pushing olfactory systems nearly to their physical and chemical limits.Missing: prioritizing | Show results with:prioritizing
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[41]
[PDF] Working memory in the honeybee (Apis mellifera)May 21, 2024 · In the experiment, bees performed better than chance when avoiding revisiting flowers, demonstrating that they were able to withhold information ...
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[42]
Humans, fish, spiders and bees inherited working memory and ...The role of inhibition in avoiding distraction by salient stimuli. Trends ... The role of landscapes and landmarks in bee navigation: a review. Insects ...
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[43]
(PDF) Bumblebees show cognitive flexibility by improving on an ...Feb 24, 2017 · Bumblebees were trained to see that a ball could be used to produce a reward. These bees then spontaneously rolled the ball when given the chance.
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[44]
Interpreting insect behavior through the lens of executive functionsAug 3, 2025 · This paper aims to position the EF framework as a promising perspective on insect behavior and cognition, entailing a distinctive set of ...
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[45]
Visually Guided Decision Making in Foraging Honeybees - PMC - NIHIn this study, bees were trained to forage in a Y-maze, where they had to choose between two competing visual stimuli in order to collect a sugar reward. When ...
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[46]
The Y-maze for testing honeybees' choice behaviour. Top view of the...An acrylic Y-maze which allows recording decisions of a walking insect confronted with two odours, each presented in one arm of the maze.
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[47]
Principles of insect path integration - PMC - PubMed CentralUsing idiothetic (e.g. self-motion) cues alone, displacement must use rotational estimates cumulatively, resulting in idiothetic path integration. Figure 3 ...Missing: Saharan silver
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[48]
Desert ants use foraging distance to adapt the nest ... - ResearchGateAug 9, 2025 · Path integration, during which angular self-motion provides the sole input for encoding heading (idiothetic path integration), results in ...<|separator|>
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[49]
Parallel vector memories in the brain of a bee as foundation ... - PNASJul 15, 2024 · Insects navigate by utilizing path integration (vector-based navigation) and landmark guidance for homing. Bees also exhibit more complex ...
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[50]
[PDF] The Role of Landscapes and Landmarks in Bee Navigation: A ReviewOct 12, 2019 · Focusing on honeybees, we suggest that foragers choose landmarks based upon their relative uniqueness, conspicuousness, stability, and context.
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[51]
Static and dynamic snapshots for goal localization in insects? - NIHThe bees' navigation performance can be explained by a matching scheme based on optic flow amplitudes (“dynamic snapshot matching”). In this article, I will ...
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[52]
Goal seeking in honeybees: matching of optic flow snapshots?Sep 1, 2010 · We show that honeybees are able to use landmarks that have the same contrast and texture as the background and suggest that the bees use relative motion cues.
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[53]
Unravelling the mechanisms of trapline foraging in bees - PMCAbstract. Trapline foraging (repeated sequential visits to a series of feeding locations) is a taxonomically widespread but poorly understood behavior.
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[54]
(PDF) Trapline foraging by bumble bees: IV. Optimization of route ...Aug 9, 2025 · We tested whether and how bumble bees can optimize and repeat their foraging routes in laboratory experiments with artificial flowers that ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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[55]
Bumblebees negotiate a trade-off between nectar quality and floral ...Nov 17, 2023 · We present a trade-off paradigm to explore foraging strategies, trait costs and valuation using the bumblebee Bombus terrestris, and the biomechanical ...
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[56]
Effects of recent experience on foraging decisions by bumble beesWe analyzed data from previous experiments to determine how recent foraging experience by bumble bees affects their flight distances to subsequent flowers. A ...
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[58]
Deconstructing and contextualizing foraging behavior in bumble ...Jun 21, 2022 · This manuscript proposes a scaffolding framework for foraging behaviors organized by behavioral states and state-transitions, spatial scale, and experience.
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[59]
Seasonal resource scarcity reduces risk sensitivity and conflict ...Sep 8, 2025 · We found that foragers are less likely to produce inhibitory stop signals during periods of seasonal resource scarcity, and individuals are more ...
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[60]
Teaching in tandem-running ants - NatureJan 11, 2006 · Tapping into the dialogue between leader and follower reveals an unexpected social skill. Tandem running, first described by E. O. Wilson, ...
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[61]
Route learning during tandem running in the rock ant Temnothorax ...May 15, 2020 · Our results show, for the first time, that tandem run followers learn specific routes from their leaders. Independent journeys back to the food ...Missing: primary | Show results with:primary
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[62]
Social signal learning of the waggle dance in honey bees - ScienceMar 9, 2023 · The honeybee waggle dance has long been recognized as a behavior that communicates information about resource location from a foraging worker to her nest mates.
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[63]
Encoding spatial information in the waggle danceOct 15, 2005 · Certainly, bees recruited through the waggle dance fly the distance and direction encoded in the dance (Riley et al.,2005), and it is often ...Missing: seminal | Show results with:seminal
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[64]
Ants adjust their pheromone deposition to a changing environment ...Jul 7, 2015 · We found that ants responded to an environmental change by strongly upregulating pheromone deposition immediately after experiencing the change.
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[65]
Collective Decision-Making and Foraging Patterns in Ants and ...In this review, we compare collective decisions in hives and in ant nests by relating the properties of recruiting signals to the foraging strategies displayed ...
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[66]
Bumblebees socially learn behaviour too complex to innovate aloneMar 6, 2024 · Here we show that bumblebees can learn from trained demonstrator bees to open a novel two-step puzzle box to obtain food rewards, even though they fail to do ...
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[67]
Bumblebees acquire alternative puzzle-box solutions via social ...Using the bumblebee Bombus terrestris as a model, we developed a two-option puzzle box task and used open diffusion paradigms to observe the transmission of ...
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[68]
Dynamics of mound repair behavior in termites - bioRxivMay 21, 2025 · In construction activities by social insects, coordination plays a crucial role, as the overall architecture emerges from the collective efforts ...Missing: executive | Show results with:executive
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[69]
Dynamics of dimorphic workers of Constrictotermes cyphergaster ...Jan 9, 2024 · Termite nest repairs are considered a defensive conduct as they reduce the colony's exposure to the external environment. Repair activities are ...Missing: executive coordination
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[70]
Honey Bees Can Use Sequence Learning to Predict Rewards from ...Mar 31, 2025 · We show that honey bees (Apis mellifera) can learn a sequence of two visually distinct food sources alternating in profitability every few minutes.Missing: metacognition 2020s
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[71]
Bumblebees acquire alternative puzzle-box solutions via social ...This study shows that populations of bumblebees are capable of acquiring and maintaining arbitrary variants of a complex, novel, non-natural foraging behavior.
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[72]
Cognition in an Insect Brain | COGNIBRAINS | Project | Fact SheetMar 14, 2025 · The EU-funded COGNIBRAINS project will study the honeybees to find out which minimal circuits mediate higher-order forms of cognitive processing in the brain.
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[73]
An insect brain organizes numbers on a left-to-right mental ... - PNASOct 17, 2022 · This work was supported by an European Research Council Advanced Grant COGNIBRAINS to M.G. and by funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 ...
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[74]
What do the mushroom bodies do for the insect brain? Twenty-five ...Neural circuits of mushroom bodies encode sensory information, adaptively change through experience and internal states, and organize behavior.
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[75]
The insect central complex - ScienceDirect.comJun 6, 2016 · The central complex is a fascinating sensorimotor hub that offers the tantalizing hope of fully understanding the neural workings of aspects of navigation.
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[76]
Diversity of visual inputs to Kenyon cells of the Drosophila ... - NatureJul 7, 2024 · The mushroom body has been shown to be required for learning of color associations in honeybees, learning of spatial associations in cockroaches ...
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[77]
Investigating visual navigation using spiking neural network models ...May 21, 2024 · The visual scene memory needed for this behaviour is mediated by the mushroom bodies; an insect brain region important for learning and memory.
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[78]
Antennal Lobe - an overview | ScienceDirect TopicsThe antennal lobe (AL) is the primary olfactory processing center in the insect brain, functionally analogous to the mammalian olfactory bulb. It is located in ...Introduction to the Antennal... · Anatomy and Cellular...
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[79]
Optic flow based spatial vision in insects - PMC - PubMed CentralThe optic flow, ie, the displacement of retinal images of objects in the environment induced by self-motion, is an important source of spatial information.
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[80]
Endocrine cybernetics: neuropeptides as molecular switches in ...Jul 27, 2022 · Here, we describe select peptidergic systems in the Drosophila brain that act at different levels of a hierarchy to modulate behaviour and associated ...<|separator|>
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[81]
Fast Synaptic Currents in Drosophila Mushroom Body Kenyon Cells ...The mushroom bodies, bilaterally symmetric regions in the insect brain, play a critical role in olfactory associative learning.
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[82]
The role of dopamine in foraging decisions in social insects - FrontiersThis review explores how DA influences risk-related behavioral choices, with a focus on its role in foraging decision-making in social insects.
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[83]
S2589-0042(25)02078-4.pdf(M.),. Bhalerao, J., Devineni, A.V., Dual roles of Drosophila reward-encoding dopamine neurons in regulating innate and learned behaviors, iScience (2025), doi: ...
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[84]
Mushroom body evolution demonstrates homology and divergence ...Mar 3, 2020 · We demonstrate that mushroom bodies typify lineages that arose before Reptantia and exist in Reptantia thereby indicating that the mushroom body ...
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[85]
Evolution, Discovery, and Interpretations of Arthropod Mushroom ...Insect mushroom bodies usually have two or more sets of lobes arising from the pedunculus at the front of the brain: the vertical lobe assemblage, the medial ...
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[86]
Evolution of insect mushroom bodies: old clues, new insightsInsect mushroom bodies are sensory integration and learning centers, composed of Kenyon cells. They likely arose independently more than once in invertebrates.Missing: origins arthropods
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[87]
Rapid expansion and visual specialisation of learning and memory ...Jul 7, 2023 · While mushroom bodies have previously been viewed as non-essential for spatial memory in Drosophila, more recent data do suggest a role in ...
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[88]
Insects as models for studying the evolution of animal cognitionInsects are good models due to their social and ecological variation, multiple evolutionary transitions, and providing a comparative perspective for cognitive ...
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[89]
Parasitoidism, not sociality, is associated with the evolution of ...Nov 10, 2010 · In insects, higher brain centres called mushroom bodies are enlarged and morphologically elaborate (having doubled, invaginated and ...Missing: MYA | Show results with:MYA
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[90]
Drosophila mef2 is essential for normal mushroom body and wing ...Gene duplications can lead to functional variations among family members, thereby driving increased cell-type diversity (Arendt, 2008) and evolutionary pressure ...
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[91]
Evolutionary dynamics of mushroom body Kenyon cell types in ...May 5, 2023 · Here, we compared transcriptomes and functions of Kenyon cell (KC) types that compose the mushroom bodies between the honey bee and sawfly.
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[92]
Genomic signatures of eusocial evolution in insects - PubMedNov 3, 2023 · The genomes of eusocial insects allow the production and regulation of highly distinct phenotypes, largely independent of genotype.Missing: cognitive gene conservation 2023-2025
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[93]
An integrative genomic toolkit for studying the genetic, evolutionary ...An integrative genomic toolkit for studying the genetic, evolutionary, and molecular underpinnings of eusociality in insects. Curr Opin Insect Sci. 2024 Oct ...Missing: cognitive conservation 2023-2025
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[94]
Recent Advances in Behavioral (Epi)Genetics in Eusocial InsectsIn this review, we highlight recent findings in eusocial insects that advance our understanding of genetic and epigenetic regulations of social behavior.
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[95]
A honeybee's ability to learn, recognize, and discriminate odors ...For example, experiments with rats and honeybees that measured response time during an olfactory discrimination task failed to observe differences in the ...
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[96]
Pain-relief learning in flies, rats, and man - PubMed Central - NIHWe review published findings from fruit flies, rats, and man showing that both aspects, respectively related to the onset and the offset of the negative event, ...
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[97]
Fruit flies show mark of intelligence in thinking before they actMay 22, 2014 · The neuroscientists showed that fruit flies take longer to make more difficult decisions.
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[98]
The number of neurons in Drosophila and mosquito brains - PMCMay 14, 2021 · Although the brain cell population is well studied in mammals, the total number of cells in insect brains remains largely unknown.
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[99]
Structural, Functional and Developmental Convergence of the Insect ...Jun 17, 2008 · The present study demonstrates that one higher brain center of insects, the mushroom bodies, displays a number of similarities with mammalian ...Missing: analog | Show results with:analog
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[100]
Defending and refining the Birch et al. (2021) precautionary ... - NIHApr 28, 2025 · The Birch et al. framework is a tool for assessing when the evidence for sentience is strong enough to warrant precautionary measures.
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[101]
Convergent evolution of complex brains and high intelligence - PMCIn any case, the highly complex brains found in insects and in cephalopods must have evolved independently, and with them high intelligence. Among craniates– ...
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[102]
Varieties of visual navigation in insects - PMC - PubMed CentralNov 28, 2022 · In this review, we characterise some of the behavioural strategies used by insects to solve navigational problems, including orientation over short-distances.