Department of Neurobiology, Duke University, Durham, NC, 27710, USA.
Duke University Center for Neuroengineering, Duke University, Durham, NC, 27710, USA.
Sci Rep. 2018 Mar 29;8(1):4699. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-22679-x.
While it is well known that the primate brain evolved to cope with complex social contingencies, the neurophysiological manifestation of social interactions in primates is not well understood. Here, concurrent wireless neuronal ensemble recordings from pairs of monkeys were conducted to measure interbrain cortical synchronization (ICS) during a whole-body navigation task that involved continuous social interaction of two monkeys. One monkey, the passenger, was carried in a robotic wheelchair to a food dispenser, while a second monkey, the observer, remained stationary, watching the passenger. The two monkeys alternated the passenger and the observer roles. Concurrent neuronal ensemble recordings from the monkeys' motor cortex and the premotor dorsal area revealed episodic occurrence of ICS with probability that depended on the wheelchair kinematics, the passenger-observer distance, and the passenger-food distance - the social-interaction factors previously described in behavioral studies. These results suggest that ICS represents specific aspects of primate social interactions.
虽然众所周知,灵长类动物的大脑是为了应对复杂的社会环境而进化的,但灵长类动物社会互动的神经生理学表现还不是很清楚。在这里,对来自成对猴子的并发无线神经元集合记录进行了研究,以测量在涉及两只猴子持续社会互动的全身导航任务期间的大脑间皮质同步(ICS)。一只猴子作为乘客被放在机器人轮椅上送到食物分配器,而第二只猴子作为观察者保持静止,观察乘客。两只猴子轮流扮演乘客和观察者的角色。来自猴子运动皮层和运动前背区的并发神经元集合记录显示,ICS 以依赖于轮椅运动学、乘客-观察者距离和乘客-食物距离的概率间歇性发生——这些是之前在行为研究中描述过的社会互动因素。这些结果表明,ICS 代表了灵长类动物社会互动的特定方面。