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From innovation to integration: Personality, sex, and learning drive recombination of innovative behaviours in lovebirds

Created on 01 Jul 2026

Authors

Wang, S., Hung, C. Y. C., Poon, E. S. K., Sin, S. Y. W.

Abstract

Behaviour innovation plays a pivotal role in a species' adaptability to dynamic environments. Investigating innovative behaviour and its underlying mechanism is therefore crucial for elucidating the development of cognitive flexibility across animals. Animal personality-which shapes how individuals perceive and engage with their surroundings-could offer insights into individual variation in this process. This study used a three-step foraging puzzle to evaluate the innovation capacity in 28 rosy-faced lovebirds (Agapornis roseicollis), specifically examining their capacity to recombine individually innovated component behaviours into integrated, more sophisticated techniques. We found that nearly half of the individuals spontaneously innovated multiple component behaviours to solve novel puzzles. Crucially, when challenged with a more sophisticated task, they recombined these behaviours into functionally dependent sequences without prior social demonstration. We further identified sex, persistence, and asocial learning capacity as key predictors of innovative problem-solving performance, with females, persistent individuals, and superior asocial learners excelled at problem-solving. Our findings demonstrate that behavioural innovation is not a static event, but a dynamic process-modulated by physical, cognitive, and personality variables-in which behaviours are flexibly transferred and recombined into increasingly complex forms to enable rapid individual adaptation.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 01 Jul 2026.

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