On cognitive maps and reinforcement learning in large-scale animal behavior

February 9, 2021
12:00 pm to 1:00 pm
Online

Event sponsored by:

Neurobiology
School of Medicine (SOM)

Contact:

Shipman, Dierdre

Share

yovel headshot

Speaker:

Yossi Yovel, hosted by Mor Ben-Tov
Duke Neurobiology welcomes Yossi Yovel, Associate Professor in the School of Zoology and in the School of Neuroscience at Tel Aviv University, and the head of the lab of NeuroEcology. For connection info, email d.shipman@duke.edu. Abstract: Bats are extreme aviators and amazing navigators. Many bat species nightly commute dozens of kilometres in search of food, and some bat species annu-ally migrate over thousands of kilometres. Studying bats in their natural envi-ronment has always been extremely challenging because of their small size (mostly <50 gr) and agile nature. We have recently developed novel miniature technology allowing us to GPS-tag small bats, thus opening a new window to document their behaviour in the wild. We have used this technology to track fruit-bats pups over 5 months from birth to adulthood. Following the bats' full movement history allowed us to show that they use novel short-cuts which are typical for cognitive-map based navigation. In a second study, we examined how nectar-feeding bats make foraging decisions under competition. We show that by relying on a simple reinforcement learning strategy, the bats can divide the resource between them without aggression or communication. Together, these results demonstrate the power of the large scale natural approach for studying animal behavior.

Neurobiology Invited Seminar Series