“…Insects, the most diverse group of invertebrates, also serve as useful models for studying higher CNS functions because of the simplicity of their nervous system, their amenability to genetic approaches, and the availability of established learning paradigms (Heisenberg, 2003;Mizunami et al, 2004;Giurfa, 2013). The best-known experimental paradigm for learning and memory in insects is olfactory associative conditioning in honeybees, in which bees associate a specific odor presented as a CS in a training session, with a reward (usually sucrose solution) presented as a US (Takeda, 1961;Bitterman et al, 1983;Menzel, 2012;Geddes et al, 2013;Scheiner et al, 2013). Since honeybees have the most prominent learning and memory capacity among insect species, this paradigm has frequently been used as a model system to explore their behavioral and physiological mechanisms (Sandoz, 2011;Menzel, 2012;Scheiner et al, 2013).…”