Animals form a behavioral decision by evaluating sensory evidence on the background of past experiences and the momentary motivational state. In insects, we still lack understanding of how and at which stage of the recurrent sensory-motor pathway behavioral decisions are formed. The mushroom body (MB), a central brain structure in insects and crustaceans, integrates sensory input of different modalities with the internal state, the behavioral state, and external sensory context through a large number of recurrent, mostly neuromodulatory inputs, implicating a functional role for MBs in state-dependent sensory-motor transformation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnimal personality and individuality are intensively researched in vertebrates and both concepts are increasingly applied to behavioral science in insects. However, only few studies have looked into individuality with respect to performance in learning and memory tasks. In vertebrates, individual learning capabilities vary considerably with respect to learning speed and learning rate.
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