Solyst James A, Buffalo Elizabeth A
Neuroscience Graduate Program, Emory University Atlanta, GA, USA ; Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington Seattle, WA, USA ; Yerkes National Primate Research Center Atlanta, GA, USA ; Washington National Primate Research Center, University of Washington Seattle, WA, USA.
Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington Seattle, WA, USA ; Washington National Primate Research Center, University of Washington Seattle, WA, USA ; Center for Translational Social Neuroscience Atlanta, GA, USA.
Front Neurosci. 2014 Nov 5;8:354. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2014.00354. eCollection 2014.
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.
多年来,通过眼动追踪技术量化在观看复杂社会场景时对社会刺激的关注度,已被证明是一种在平均临床诊断之前多年就能诊断自闭症谱系障碍的敏感方法。恒河猴为理解社会观看行为背后的机制提供了理想模型,但迄今为止尚未开发出可用于猴子的类似行为任务。我们使用一种新颖的场景观看任务,在三只恒河猴自由观看精心控制的合成社会场景时监测它们的注视情况,并分析它们观看物体和猴子所花费的时间。在六个行为实验环节中的每一个环节,猴子观看一组90张图像(540个独特场景),每个图像呈现两次。在三分之二的重复场景中,一只猴子或一个物体被一个新的物品替换(操控场景)。当观看重复场景时,猴子的注视时间更长,扫视时间更短,从快速定向到全局场景内容转变为对较少物品进行更局部的分析。除了这种重复效应外,在操控场景中,猴子通过花费更多时间观看被替换的物品表现出强大的记忆力。通过分析对特定场景内容的关注度,我们发现猴子强烈倾向于观看同种个体,而且这与它们在低层次图像特征方面的显著性无关。对观看统计数据的无模型分析发现,较早且较长时间被观看的猴子面部和臀部周围有直接注视和更红的性皮肤,这是两个重要的视觉社交线索。这些数据量化了恒河猴观看复杂社会场景时的观看策略、记忆力和社会偏好,并且为与旨在增强社会认知的治疗效果进行比较提供了重要基线。