Making the Right Decision, If You’re A Rat
It’s Friday night and you have an exam on Monday. Between then and now, you would like to study, but you have also been invited to a party and have a date to go on. To decide how to spend your weekend, you will have to weigh the cost of a lower exam grade with the benefit of getting out with your main squeeze and partying.
A study by Ruud van den Bos has recently determined that Wistar rats have the ability to make decisions like this also. Van den Bos and his staff set up a T-shaped track, with the two arms of the T having treats in both. The rat was released in the bottom of the T and left to choose which arm it would enter to eat the treats there. The trick is in the varying difficulty between the arms. One arm would have a straight path to a single treat, the other barriers to scale to get to a larger amount of treats. In each successive test, the toughness of the path over the barriers was varied. The rats would have to determine how much energy they were willing to spend to get treats. When the barriers were small, the rats went over them most of the time to get the large reward. But when the path was harder, the rats more often went to the other arm for the one treat. This meant that the rats decided the energy cost was too high to scale the barriers when they were steep.
Van den Bos’s team noticed that rats seem to have a set amount of energy they are willing to spend on a certain activity. This standard may be predetermined by genetics and also past experiences and decision making on the part of the rat.
Posted by Natural K (8)