AI Article Synopsis

  • When individuals rise in social dominance, they experience various behavioral and physiological changes that can affect cognitive functions like learning and memory.
  • The study focused on male African cichlid fish, assessing their performance in cognitive tasks before and after a social disruption that changed dominance rankings.
  • The researchers found that ascending males showed changes in hormone levels and cognitive preferences, highlighting a link between social status and cognitive abilities that influences decision-making in animals.

Article Abstract

When an individual ascends in dominance status within their social community, they often undergo a suite of behavioural, physiological and neuromolecular changes. While these changes have been extensively characterized across a number of species, we know much less about the degree to which these changes in turn influence cognitive processes like associative learning, memory and spatial navigation. Here, we assessed male , an African cichlid fish known for its dynamic social dominance hierarchies, in a set of cognitive tasks both before and after a community perturbation in which some individuals ascended in dominance status. We assayed steroid hormone (cortisol, testosterone) levels before and after the community experienced a social perturbation. We found that ascending males changed their physiology and novel object recognition preference during the perturbation, and they subsequently differed in social competence from non-ascenders. Additionally, using a principal component analysis we were able to identify specific cognitive and physiological attributes that appear to predispose certain individuals to ascend in social status once a perturbation occurs. These previously undiscovered relationships between social ascent and cognition further emphasize the broad influence of social dominance on animal decision-making. This article is part of the theme issue 'The centennial of the pecking order: current state and future prospects for the study of dominance hierarchies'.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8743896PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2020.0448DOI Listing

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