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« Previous AbstractThe Effect of Trail Pheromone and Path Confinement on Learning of Complex Routes in the Ant Lasius niger    Next AbstractThe multi-dimensional nature of information drives prioritization of private over social information in ants »

J Comp Psychol


Title:Greater effort increases perceived value in an invertebrate
Author(s):Czaczkes TJ; Brandstetter B; di Stefano I; Heinze J;
Address:"Animal Comparative Economics Laboratory, Institute of Zoology, Universitat Regensburg. Institute of Zoology, Universitat Regensburg"
Journal Title:J Comp Psychol
Year:2018
Volume:20180305
Issue:2
Page Number:200 - 209
DOI: 10.1037/com0000109
ISSN/ISBN:1939-2087 (Electronic) 0021-9940 (Linking)
Abstract:"Expending effort is generally considered to be undesirable. However, both humans and vertebrates will work for a reward they could also get for free. Moreover, cues associated with high-effort rewards are preferred to low-effort associated cues. Many explanations for these counterintuitive findings have been suggested, including cognitive dissonance (self-justification) or a greater contrast in state (e.g., energy or frustration level) before and after an effort-linked reward. Here, we test whether effort expenditure also increases perceived value in ants, using both classical cue-association methods and pheromone deposition, which correlates with perceived value. In 2 separate experimental setups, we show that pheromone deposition is higher toward the reward that requires more effort: 47% more pheromone deposition was performed for rewards reached via a vertical runway (high effort) compared with ones reached via a horizontal runway (low effort), and deposition rates were 28% higher on rough (high effort) versus smooth (low effort) runways. Using traditional cue-association methods, 63% of ants trained on different surface roughness, and 70% of ants trained on different runway elevations, preferred the high-effort related cues on a Y maze. Finally, pheromone deposition to feeders requiring memorization of one path bifurcation was up to 29% higher than to an identical feeder requiring no learning. Our results suggest that effort affects value perception in ants. This effect may stem from a cognitive process, which monitors the change in a generalized hedonic state before and after reward. (PsycINFO Database Record"
Keywords:Animals Ants/*physiology Learning/*physiology Pheromones/pharmacology *Reward;
Notes:"MedlineCzaczkes, Tomer J Brandstetter, Birgit di Stefano, Isabella Heinze, Jurgen eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2018/03/06 J Comp Psychol. 2018 May; 132(2):200-209. doi: 10.1037/com0000109. Epub 2018 Mar 5"

 
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