Appetitive Behavior in the Social Transmission of Food Preference Paradigm Predicts Activation of Orexin-A producing Neurons in a Sex-Dependent Manner

Author(s):  
Laura A. Agee ◽  
Victoria Nemchek ◽  
Cassidy A. Malone ◽  
Hongjoo J. Lee ◽  
Marie-H. Monfils
2014 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. DTI.S14813 ◽  
Author(s):  
Furuzan Akar ◽  
Oguz Mutlu ◽  
Ipek K. Celikyurt ◽  
Emine Bektas ◽  
Mehmet H. Tanyeri ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Hirshleifer ◽  
Siew Hong Teoh

AbstractEvolved dispositions influence, but do not determine, how people think about economic problems. The evolutionary cognitive approach offers important insights but underweights the social transmission of ideas as a level of explanation. The need for asocialexplanation for the evolution of economic attitudes is evidenced, for example, by immense variations in folk-economic beliefs over time and across individuals.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 586-586
Author(s):  
N M Weststrate ◽  
J Glück ◽  
M Ferrari

2014 ◽  
Vol 128 (4) ◽  
pp. 413-418 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joost X. Maier ◽  
Meredith L. Blankenship ◽  
Nicholas C. Barry ◽  
Sarah E. Richards ◽  
Donald B. Katz

Author(s):  
Nicolas Langlitz

This chapter examines how chimpanzee ethnographer Christophe Boesch and his group studied the social transmission of cultural traits in the chimpanzee communities of Taï Forest, Côte d'Ivoire. This ethnographic account of primatological fieldwork in the mid-2010s measures the historical distance to the 1960s when Jane Goodall and others sought to take part in the social life of great apes. In contemporary Taï, by contrast, disengaged observations of habituated chimpanzees served to protect both Pan and Homo. Despite the researchers' efforts to keep human–animal relations as neutral as possible, different chimpanzee communities related to their observers differently. In the forest, chimpanzee ethnography could hardly be distinguished from other forms of fieldwork. Boesch's approach to writing wild cultures turned out to share an important feature with humanities scholarship: references to philosophical classics gave it an intensely polemic bent rarely found in the scientific literature.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 239821282093973
Author(s):  
Etienne Quet ◽  
Jean-Christophe Cassel ◽  
Brigitte Cosquer ◽  
Marine Galloux ◽  
Anne Pereira De Vasconcelos ◽  
...  

According to the standard theory of memory consolidation, recent memories are stored in the hippocampus before their transfer to cortical modules, a process called systemic consolidation. The ventral midline thalamus (reuniens and rhomboid nuclei, ReRh) takes part in this transfer as its lesion disrupts systemic consolidation of spatial and contextual fear memories. Here, we wondered whether ReRh lesions would also affect the systemic consolidation of another type of memory, namely an olfaction-based social memory. To address this question we focused on social transmission of food preference. Adult Long-Evans rats were subjected to N-methyl-d-aspartate-induced, fibre-sparing lesions of the ReRh nuclei or to a sham-operation, and subsequently trained in a social transmission of food preference paradigm. Retrieval was tested on the next day (recent memory, nSham = 10, nReRh = 12) or after a 25-day delay (remote memory, nSham = 10, nReRh = 10). All rats, whether sham-operated or subjected to ReRh lesions, learned and remembered the task normally, whatever the delay. Compared to our former results on spatial and contextual fear memories (Ali et al., 2017; Klein et al., 2019; Loureiro et al., 2012; Quet et al., 2020), the present findings indicate that the ReRh nuclei might not be part of a generic, systemic consolidation mechanism processing all kinds of memories in order to make them persistent. The difference between social transmission of food preference and spatial or contextual fear memories could be explained by the fact that social transmission of food preference is not hippocampus-dependent and that the persistence of social transmission of food preference memory relies on different circuits.


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