Invertebrate learning and memory: Fifty years of olfactory conditioning of the proboscis extension response in honeybees

  1. Jean-Christophe Sandoz3
  1. 1Université de Toulouse, UPS, Research Centre for Animal Cognition, 31062 Toulouse Cedex 9, France
  2. 2CNRS, Research Centre for Animal Cognition, 31062 Toulouse Cedex 9, France
  3. 3Laboratory Evolution, Genomes and Speciation, CNRS, 91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France

    Abstract

    The honeybee Apis mellifera has emerged as a robust and influential model for the study of classical conditioning, thanks to the existence of a powerful Pavlovian conditioning protocol, the olfactory conditioning of the proboscis extension response (PER). In 2011, the olfactory PER conditioning protocol celebrates 50 years since it was first introduced by Kimihisa Takeda in 1961. Here, we review its origins, developments, and perspectives in order to define future research avenues and necessary methodological and conceptual evolutions. We show that olfactory PER conditioning has become a versatile tool for the study of questions in extremely diverse fields in addition to the study of learning and memory and that it has allowed behavioral characterizations, not only of honeybees, but also of other insect species, for which the protocol was adapted. We celebrate, therefore, Takeda's original work and prompt colleagues to conceive and establish further robust behavioral tools for an accurate characterization of insect learning and memory at multiple levels of analysis.

    Footnotes

    • 4 Corresponding author.

      E-mail giurfa{at}cict.fr.

    • Received October 30, 2011.
    • Accepted December 8, 2011.
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