Idiosyncratic learning performance in flies release_oep5w4gnbnbrdftnsxef2khw7i

by Matthew A.-Y. Smith, Kyle S. Honegger, Glenn Turner, Benjamin de Bivort

Published in Biology Letters by The Royal Society.

2022   Volume 18, Issue 2, p20210424

Abstract

Individuals vary in their innate behaviours, even when they have the same genome and have been reared in the same environment. The extent of individuality in plastic behaviours, like learning, is less well characterized. Also unknown is the extent to which intragenotypic differences in learning generalize: if an individual performs well in one assay, will it perform well in other assays? We investigated this using the fruit fly <jats:italic>Drosophila melanogaster</jats:italic> , an organism long-used to study the mechanistic basis of learning and memory. We found that isogenic flies, reared in identical laboratory conditions, and subject to classical conditioning that associated odorants with electric shock, exhibit clear individuality in their learning responses. Flies that performed well when an odour was paired with shock tended to perform well when the odour was paired with bitter taste or when other odours were paired with shock. Thus, individuality in learning performance appears to be prominent in isogenic animals reared identically, and individual differences in learning performance generalize across some aversive sensory modalities. Establishing these results in flies opens up the possibility of studying the genetic and neural circuit basis of individual differences in learning in a highly suitable model organism.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   3.8 MB
file_s7nv36huvbawxljnu2nhp2uhfm
royalsocietypublishing.org (web)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Date   2022-02-02
Language   en ?
Container Metadata
Not in DOAJ
In Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:  1744-9561
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: 69a158ee-e1e6-4dd9-b629-7813d698049e
API URL: JSON