Nummela Samuel U, Jovanovic Vladimir, de la Mothe Lisa, Miller Cory T
Cortical Systems and Behavior Laboratory and
Cortical Systems and Behavior Laboratory and.
J Neurosci. 2017 Jul 19;37(29):7036-7047. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0702-17.2017. Epub 2017 Jun 19.
Communication is an inherently interactive process that weaves together the fabric of both human and nonhuman primate societies. To investigate the properties of the primate brain during active social signaling, we recorded the responses of frontal cortex neurons as freely moving marmosets engaged in conversational exchanges with a visually occluded virtual marmoset. We found that small changes in firing rate (∼1 Hz) occurred across a broadly distributed population of frontal cortex neurons when marmosets heard a conspecific vocalization, and that these changes corresponded to subjects' likelihood of producing or withholding a vocal reply. Although the contributions of individual neurons were relatively small, large populations of neurons were able to clearly distinguish between these social contexts. Most significantly, this social context-dependent change in firing rate was evident even before subjects heard the vocalization, indicating that the probability of a conversational exchange was determined by the state of the frontal cortex at the time a vocalization was heard, and not by a decision driven by acoustic characteristics of the vocalization. We found that changes in neural activity scaled with the length of the conversation, with greater changes in firing rate evident for longer conversations. These data reveal specific and important facets of this neural activity that constrain its possible roles in active social signaling, and we hypothesize that the close coupling between frontal cortex activity and this natural, active primate social-signaling behavior facilitates social-monitoring mechanisms critical to conversational exchanges. We provide evidence for a novel pattern of neural activity in the frontal cortex of freely moving, naturally behaving, marmoset monkeys that may facilitate natural primate conversations. We discovered small (∼1 Hz), but reliable, changes in neural activity that occurred before marmosets even heard a conspecific vocalization that, as a population, almost perfectly predicted whether subjects would produce a vocalization in response. The change in the state of the frontal cortex persisted throughout the conversation and its magnitude scaled linearly with the length of the interaction. We hypothesize that this social context-dependent change in frontal cortex activity is supported by several mechanisms, such as social arousal and attention, and facilitates social monitoring critical for vocal coordination characteristic of human and nonhuman primate conversations.
交流是一个内在的互动过程,它将人类和非人类灵长类动物社会的结构交织在一起。为了研究在活跃的社会信号传递过程中灵长类动物大脑的特性,我们记录了自由活动的狨猴与视觉上被遮挡的虚拟狨猴进行对话交流时额叶皮质神经元的反应。我们发现,当狨猴听到同种的叫声时,在广泛分布的额叶皮质神经元群体中出现了 firing rate(约1Hz)的微小变化,并且这些变化与受试者发出或抑制声音回应的可能性相对应。尽管单个神经元的贡献相对较小,但大量神经元能够清楚地区分这些社会情境。最显著的是,这种 firing rate 的社会情境依赖性变化甚至在受试者听到叫声之前就很明显,这表明对话交流的可能性是由听到叫声时额叶皮质的状态决定的,而不是由叫声的声学特征驱动的决策决定的。我们发现神经活动的变化与对话的长度成比例,对话越长,firing rate 的变化越明显。这些数据揭示了这种神经活动的特定且重要的方面,这些方面限制了其在活跃的社会信号传递中可能发挥的作用,并且我们假设额叶皮质活动与这种自然的、活跃的灵长类动物社会信号行为之间的紧密耦合促进了对对话交流至关重要的社会监测机制。我们为自由活动、自然行为的狨猴额叶皮质中一种可能促进自然灵长类动物对话的新型神经活动模式提供了证据。我们发现,在狨猴甚至还未听到同种叫声之前,神经活动就出现了微小(约1Hz)但可靠的变化,作为一个群体,这些变化几乎完美地预测了受试者是否会发出声音回应。额叶皮质状态的变化在整个对话过程中持续存在,其幅度与互动的长度呈线性比例。我们假设这种额叶皮质活动的社会情境依赖性变化由多种机制支持,例如社会唤醒和注意力,并促进了对人类和非人类灵长类动物对话中声音协调至关重要的社会监测。