Have you ever viewed a tutorial to learn a video game trick, get homework help, or see how a DIY craft is done? People often pick up new skills by observing others. Beginner cooks learn techniques by watching experienced chefs. Young children who see others with a toy often play with it in the same way when it’s their turn. Gaining skills by observing and imitating others is called social learning.
For a long time, social learning was thought to occur only in humans. But in recent decades, scientists have documented other animals, including mammals and birds, learning this way (see Animal Students). Now, for the first time, scientists have observed social learning in an invertebrate—an animal without a backbone. A new investigation by researchers in the United Kingdom has shown that bumblebees can learn some impressive puzzle-solving skills from one another.
How can you learn a video game trick, get homework help, or see how to do a DIY craft? You might watch a tutorial. People often pick up new skills by watching others. Beginner cooks learn by watching experienced chefs. Young children see others with a toy. When it’s their turn, they often play with it in the same way. We observe and imitate others to gain skills. This is called social learning.
Does social learning occur only in humans? For a long time, scientists thought so. But in recent decades, they’ve seen it in other animals, like mammals and birds (see Animal Students). Now scientists have observed social learning in an invertebrate for the first time. That’s an animal without a backbone. Researchers in the United Kingdom conducted a new study. It shows that bumblebees can learn some impressive puzzle-solving skills from one another.