Elias Latchem, Culum Brown, and Sigal Balshine (2025)
Influence of Social Rank on Learning
Animal Behaviour.
Dominance hierarchies are found in many group living species and an individual’s social rank can influence their access to resources, behaviours, and physiology. However, the effect of rank on learning capability has not been well studied. Here, we examined how rank influences learning in the group living cichlid fish Neolamprologus pulcher. We tested learning in both dominant and subordinate fish and investigated if rank is related to the capacity to learn independently (asocial learning) as well as from others (social learning). Fish learned to move coloured discs to access a food reward, either by trial and error on their own or by watching a trained demonstrator. We found no differences between ranks in the individual associative learning task, but subordinates were faster at changing their behaviour when we changed the reward rules (during the reversal learning phase). We also found no differences in the number of trials it took dominants and subordinates to socially learn the task (from watching demonstrators) but individuals learned the task faster when they could observe others. Our results indicate that some aspects of learning can be influenced by social rank, but rank does not appear to affect general learning ability.
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