McGuire Molly, Vonk Jennifer M
Zoo Miami, Miami, FL, USA.
Department of Psychology, Oakland University, Rochester, MI, USA.
PeerJ. 2020 Jul 10;8:e9525. doi: 10.7717/peerj.9525. eCollection 2020.
Individuals experiencing negative affect have shown response slowing, a longer latency to respond in relation to baseline, when presented with aversive stimuli. We assessed response slowing in three male gorillas housed in a bachelor group as a function of daytime and nighttime housing arrangements.
In both experiments, three gorillas were rewarded for touching a single image (baseline, non-threatening gorilla or threatening gorilla) on a touchscreen. In Experiment One, they completed 48 50-trial sessions across combinations of three nested daytime and three nighttime conditions. In Experiment Two, they completed eight 50-trial sessions with novel stimuli across two daytime conditions, which were nested within two nighttime conditions. Housing conditions represented different amounts of space and degree of choice. We predicted that the gorillas would show response slowing to threatening stimuli when space and choice were restricted.
We did not observe response slowing in Experiment One, although daytime and nighttime conditions interacted to predict response latencies. The gorillas responded more slowly when they had access to indoors and outdoors overnight compared to when they were in their stalls or together in an indoor habitat, but only if they had been given access to both indoors and outdoors or locked in the indoor habitat the day before. In Experiment Two, the gorillas did show response slowing to threatening stimuli, but this pattern did not interact with housing conditions. Our results, although limited by a small sample, are somewhat consistent with those of a previous study that did not find significant response slowing for apes as a function of aversive testing conditions, although the procedure has been effective in identifying dysregulated fear (high fear in low threat conditions) in macaques. The utility of this paradigm for testing affect in apes awaits further evaluation.
当面对厌恶刺激时,体验到负面情绪的个体表现出反应减慢,即相对于基线而言反应潜伏期延长。我们评估了居住在单身群体中的三只雄性大猩猩的反应减慢情况,该情况是白天和夜间居住安排的函数。
在两个实验中,三只大猩猩因在触摸屏上触摸单个图像(基线、无威胁的大猩猩或有威胁的大猩猩)而获得奖励。在实验一中,它们在三种嵌套的白天条件和三种夜间条件的组合下完成了48次每次50次试验的环节。在实验二中,它们在两种白天条件下,针对新刺激完成了八次每次50次试验的环节,这两种白天条件嵌套在两种夜间条件之中。居住条件代表了不同的空间量和选择程度。我们预测,当空间和选择受到限制时,大猩猩对有威胁的刺激会表现出反应减慢。
在实验一中,我们没有观察到反应减慢,尽管白天和夜间条件相互作用以预测反应潜伏期。与整夜都待在厩舍或一起待在室内栖息地相比,当大猩猩能在室内外过夜时,它们的反应更慢,但前提是它们前一天被允许进入室内外或被锁在室内栖息地。在实验二中,大猩猩确实对有威胁的刺激表现出反应减慢,但这种模式与居住条件没有相互作用。我们的结果虽然受样本量小的限制,但在某种程度上与之前一项研究的结果一致,该研究没有发现猿类作为厌恶测试条件的函数有显著的反应减慢,尽管该程序已有效地识别了猕猴中失调的恐惧(低威胁条件下的高恐惧)。这种范式在测试猿类情绪方面的效用有待进一步评估。