Zarei Shahab A, Sheibani Vahid, Mansouri Farshad A
Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, Kerman Neuroscience Research Center, Institute of Neuropharmacology, Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran.
Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, Cognitive Neuroscience Research Centre, Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran.
Am J Primatol. 2019 Jul;81(7):e22999. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22999. Epub 2019 Jun 27.
Background music is one of the most frequently encountered contextual factors that affect cognitive and emotional functions in humans. However, it is still unclear whether music induces similar effects in nonhuman primates. Answering this question might bring insight to the long-lasting question regarding the ability of nonhuman primates in perceiving and dissociating music from other nonmusical acoustic information. In the present study, macaque monkeys were trained to perform a working memory task that required matching visual stimuli. These stimuli had different emotional content (neutral, negative, and positive). Monkeys performed the task within different background acoustic conditions (music, same-intensity noise, and silence). We hypothesized that the auditory stimuli might interact with emotional information of visual stimuli and modulate monkeys' performance. Furthermore, if the effects of music and noise on monkeys' behavioral measures differ it would mean that monkeys perceived and processed music differently. We found that, monkeys committed more errors and were slower when they encountered stimuli with negative or positive emotional content. In the presence of music, the influence of emotional stimuli on monkeys' performance significantly differed from those of the neutral stimuli, however, in the presence of noise, the effects of emotional stimuli on monkeys' performance were not distinguishable. The dissociable effects of music and noise on monkeys' performance show that the effects of emotional stimuli were dependent on the background acoustic conditions. Our findings indicate that background music and the same-intensity noise were differentially perceived by monkeys and influenced their cognitive functions.
背景音乐是影响人类认知和情感功能的最常见情境因素之一。然而,音乐是否会在非人类灵长类动物中产生类似的效果仍不清楚。回答这个问题可能会为关于非人类灵长类动物感知音乐并将其与其他非音乐声学信息区分开来的能力这一长期问题带来启示。在本研究中,猕猴被训练执行一项需要匹配视觉刺激的工作记忆任务。这些刺激具有不同的情感内容(中性、负面和正面)。猴子在不同的背景声学条件(音乐、相同强度的噪音和寂静)下执行任务。我们假设听觉刺激可能与视觉刺激的情感信息相互作用并调节猴子的表现。此外,如果音乐和噪音对猴子行为测量的影响不同,那就意味着猴子对音乐的感知和处理方式不同。我们发现,当猴子遇到具有负面或正面情感内容的刺激时,它们会犯更多错误且反应更慢。在有音乐的情况下,情感刺激对猴子表现的影响与中性刺激的影响显著不同,然而,在有噪音的情况下,情感刺激对猴子表现的影响无法区分。音乐和噪音对猴子表现的可分离效应表明,情感刺激的影响取决于背景声学条件。我们的研究结果表明,猴子对背景音乐和相同强度的噪音有不同的感知,并影响它们的认知功能。