Welfare and Cognition Group, Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, German Primate Center-Leibniz Institute for Primate Research, Goettingen, Germany.
Leibniz-Science Campus Primate Cognition, German Primate Center, University of Goettingen, Goettingen, Germany.
Eur Surg Res. 2023;64(1):37-53. doi: 10.1159/000521440. Epub 2021 Dec 16.
Understanding the impact routine research and laboratory procedures have on animals is crucial to improving their well-being and to the success and reproducibility of the research they are involved in. Cognitive measures of welfare offer insight into animals' internal psychological state, but require validation. Attention bias - the tendency to attend to one type of information over another - is a cognitive phenomenon documented in humans and animals that is known to be modulated by affective state (i.e., emotions). Hence, changes in attention bias may offer researchers a deeper perspective of their animals' psychological well-being. The dot-probe task is an established method for quantifying attention bias in humans (by measuring reaction time to a dot-probe replacing pairs of stimuli), but has yet to be validated in animals. We developed a dot-probe task for long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) to determine if the task can detect changes in attention bias following anesthesia, a context known to modulate attention and trigger physiological arousal in macaques. Our task included the following features: stimulus pairs of threatening and neutral facial expressions of conspecifics and their scrambled counterparts, two stimuli durations (100 and 1,000 ms), and counterbalancing of the dot-probe's position on the touchscreen (left and right) and location relative to the threatening stimulus. We tested 8 group-housed adult females on different days relative to being anesthetized (baseline and 1-, 3-, 7-, and 14-days after). At baseline, monkeys were vigilant to threatening content when stimulus pairs were presented for 100 ms, but not 1,000 ms. On the day immediately following anesthesia, we found evidence that attention bias changed to an avoidance of threatening content. Attention bias returned to threat vigilance by the third day postanesthesia and remained so up to the last day of testing (14-days after anesthesia). We also found that attention bias was independent of the type of stimuli pair (i.e., whole face vs. scrambled counterparts), suggesting that the scrambled stimuli retained aspects of the original stimuli. Nevertheless, whole faces were more salient to the monkeys as responses to these trials were generally slower than to scrambled stimulus pairs. Overall, our study suggests it is feasible to detect changes in attention bias following anesthesia using the dot-probe task in nonhuman primates. Our results also reveal important aspects of stimulus preparation and experimental design.
了解常规研究和实验室程序对动物的影响对于提高动物福利以及研究的成功和可重复性至关重要。福利的认知测量提供了对动物内部心理状态的深入了解,但需要验证。注意偏向——即倾向于关注一种类型的信息而不是另一种类型的信息——是人类和动物中记录的一种认知现象,已知它受到情感状态(即情绪)的调节。因此,注意偏向的变化可能为研究人员提供更深入的视角来了解其动物的心理福利。点探测任务是一种用于量化人类注意偏向的既定方法(通过测量对替换一对刺激的点探测的反应时间),但尚未在动物中得到验证。我们为长尾猕猴(Macaca fascicularis)开发了一种点探测任务,以确定该任务是否能够检测到麻醉后注意偏向的变化,这种情况已知会调节猕猴的注意力并引发生理唤醒。我们的任务包括以下特征:同种个体的威胁和中性面部表情的刺激对及其打乱的对应物,两种刺激持续时间(100 和 1000 毫秒),以及点探测在触摸屏上的位置(左侧和右侧)和相对于威胁刺激的位置的平衡。我们在不同的日子里对 8 只群居的成年雌性猕猴进行了测试,这些日子与麻醉有关(基线和麻醉后 1、3、7 和 14 天)。在基线时,当刺激对呈现 100 毫秒时,猴子对威胁内容保持警惕,但呈现 1000 毫秒时则不然。在麻醉后立即的那一天,我们发现有证据表明注意偏向已转变为对威胁内容的回避。麻醉后第三天,注意偏向恢复到对威胁的警惕,直到最后一天的测试(麻醉后 14 天)。我们还发现,注意偏向与刺激对的类型无关(即,整个面部与打乱的对应物),这表明打乱的刺激保留了原始刺激的某些方面。尽管如此,整个面部对于猴子来说更为突出,因为对这些试验的反应通常比打乱的刺激对要慢。总的来说,我们的研究表明,在非人类灵长类动物中使用点探测任务检测麻醉后注意偏向的变化是可行的。我们的结果还揭示了刺激准备和实验设计的重要方面。