Iowa Neuroscience Institute, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, United states.
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, The University of Delaware, Newark, United states.
Elife. 2018 Nov 2;7:e38790. doi: 10.7554/eLife.38790.
Individuals must predict future events to proactively guide their behavior. Predicting when events will occur is a critical component of these expectations. Temporal expectations are often generated based on individual cue-duration relationships. However, the durations associated with different environmental cues will often co-vary due to a common cause. We show that timing behavior may be calibrated based on this expected covariance, which we refer to as the 'common cause hypothesis'. In five experiments using rats, we found that when the duration associated with one temporal cue changes, timed-responding to other cues shift in the same direction. Furthermore, training subjects that expecting covariance is not appropriate in a given situation blocks this effect. Finally, we confirmed that this transfer is context-dependent. These results reveal a novel principle that modulates timing behavior, which we predict will apply across a variety of magnitude-expectations.
个体必须预测未来事件,以主动引导其行为。预测事件何时发生是这些预期的关键组成部分。时间预期通常基于个体线索-持续时间关系来产生。然而,由于共同的原因,与不同环境线索相关的持续时间通常会共同变化。我们表明,定时行为可能基于这种预期的协方差进行校准,我们称之为“共同原因假设”。在使用大鼠进行的五个实验中,我们发现当与一个时间线索相关的持续时间发生变化时,对其他线索的定时响应也会朝着相同的方向变化。此外,训练受试者,如果在特定情况下预期协方差不合适,则会阻止这种效果。最后,我们证实这种转移是上下文相关的。这些结果揭示了一种调节定时行为的新原则,我们预测该原则将适用于各种大小预期。