Social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaques

Quantifying attention to social stimuli during the viewing of complex social scenes with eye tracking has proven to be a sensitive method in the diagnosis of autism spectrum disorders years before average clinical diagnosis. Rhesus macaques provide an ideal model for understanding the mechanisms und...

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Main Authors: James Andrew Solyst, Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2014.00354/full
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spelling doaj-bebdb37e1a304224822700b060398bd32020-11-24T21:45:11ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neuroscience1662-453X2014-11-01810.3389/fnins.2014.0035476527Social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaquesJames Andrew Solyst0James Andrew Solyst1James Andrew Solyst2James Andrew Solyst3Elizabeth Ann Buffalo4Elizabeth Ann Buffalo5Elizabeth Ann Buffalo6Emory UniversityUniversity of WashingtonYerkes National Primate Research CenterWashington National Primate Research CenterUniversity of WashingtonCenter for Translational Social NeuroscienceWashington National Primate Research CenterQuantifying attention to social stimuli during the viewing of complex social scenes with eye tracking has proven to be a sensitive method in the diagnosis of autism spectrum disorders years before average clinical diagnosis. Rhesus macaques provide an ideal model for understanding the mechanisms underlying social viewing behavior, but to date no comparable behavioral task has been developed for use in monkeys. Using a novel scene-viewing task, we monitored the gaze of three rhesus macaques while they freely viewed well-controlled composed social scenes and analyzed the time spent viewing objects and monkeys. In each of six behavioral sessions, monkeys viewed a set of 90 images (540 unique scenes) with each image presented twice. In two-thirds of the repeated scenes, either a monkey or an object was replaced with a novel item (manipulated scenes). When viewing a repeated scene, monkeys made longer fixations and shorter saccades, shifting from a rapid orienting to global scene contents to a more local analysis of fewer items. In addition to this repetition effect, in manipulated scenes, monkeys demonstrated robust memory by spending more time viewing the replaced items. By analyzing attention to specific scene content, we found that monkeys strongly preferred to view conspecifics and that this was not related to their salience in terms of low-level image features. A model-free analysis of viewing statistics found that monkeys that were viewed earlier and longer had direct gaze and redder sex skin around their face and rump, two important visual social cues. These data provide a quantification of viewing strategy, memory and social preferences in rhesus macaques viewing complex social scenes, and they provide an important baseline with which to compare to the effects of therapeutics aimed at enhancing social cognition.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2014.00354/fullAttentionMemorysocial cognitionsalienceface perceptionRhesus Monkey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James Andrew Solyst
James Andrew Solyst
James Andrew Solyst
James Andrew Solyst
Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
spellingShingle James Andrew Solyst
James Andrew Solyst
James Andrew Solyst
James Andrew Solyst
Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
Social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaques
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Attention
Memory
social cognition
salience
face perception
Rhesus Monkey
author_facet James Andrew Solyst
James Andrew Solyst
James Andrew Solyst
James Andrew Solyst
Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
Elizabeth Ann Buffalo
author_sort James Andrew Solyst
title Social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaques
title_short Social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaques
title_full Social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaques
title_fullStr Social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaques
title_full_unstemmed Social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaques
title_sort social relevance drives viewing behavior independent of low-level salience in rhesus macaques
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neuroscience
issn 1662-453X
publishDate 2014-11-01
description Quantifying attention to social stimuli during the viewing of complex social scenes with eye tracking has proven to be a sensitive method in the diagnosis of autism spectrum disorders years before average clinical diagnosis. Rhesus macaques provide an ideal model for understanding the mechanisms underlying social viewing behavior, but to date no comparable behavioral task has been developed for use in monkeys. Using a novel scene-viewing task, we monitored the gaze of three rhesus macaques while they freely viewed well-controlled composed social scenes and analyzed the time spent viewing objects and monkeys. In each of six behavioral sessions, monkeys viewed a set of 90 images (540 unique scenes) with each image presented twice. In two-thirds of the repeated scenes, either a monkey or an object was replaced with a novel item (manipulated scenes). When viewing a repeated scene, monkeys made longer fixations and shorter saccades, shifting from a rapid orienting to global scene contents to a more local analysis of fewer items. In addition to this repetition effect, in manipulated scenes, monkeys demonstrated robust memory by spending more time viewing the replaced items. By analyzing attention to specific scene content, we found that monkeys strongly preferred to view conspecifics and that this was not related to their salience in terms of low-level image features. A model-free analysis of viewing statistics found that monkeys that were viewed earlier and longer had direct gaze and redder sex skin around their face and rump, two important visual social cues. These data provide a quantification of viewing strategy, memory and social preferences in rhesus macaques viewing complex social scenes, and they provide an important baseline with which to compare to the effects of therapeutics aimed at enhancing social cognition.
topic Attention
Memory
social cognition
salience
face perception
Rhesus Monkey
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnins.2014.00354/full
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