Macaque monkeys and humans sample temporal regularities in the acoustic environment

Many animal species show comparable abilities to detect basic rhythms and produce rhythmic behavior. Yet, the capacities to process complex rhythms and synchronize rhythmic behavior appear to be species-specific: vocal learning animals can, but some primates might not. This discrepancy is of high in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in neurobiology 2023-10, Vol.229, p.102502-102502, Article 102502
Hauptverfasser: Criscuolo, Antonio, Schwartze, Michael, Prado, Luis, Ayala, Yaneri, Merchant, Hugo, Kotz, Sonja A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Many animal species show comparable abilities to detect basic rhythms and produce rhythmic behavior. Yet, the capacities to process complex rhythms and synchronize rhythmic behavior appear to be species-specific: vocal learning animals can, but some primates might not. This discrepancy is of high interest as there is a putative link between rhythm processing and the development of sophisticated sensorimotor behavior in humans. Do our closest ancestors show comparable endogenous dispositions to sample the acoustic environment in the absence of task instructions and training? We recorded EEG from macaque monkeys and humans while they passively listened to isochronous equitone sequences. Individual- and trial-level analyses showed that macaque monkeys’ and humans’ delta-band neural oscillations encoded and tracked the timing of auditory events. Further, mu- (8–15 Hz) and beta-band (12–20 Hz) oscillations revealed the superimposition of varied accentuation patterns on a subset of trials. These observations suggest convergence in the encoding and dynamic attending of temporal regularities in the acoustic environment, bridging a gap in the phylogenesis of rhythm cognition. •Macaque and human EEG show converging neural signatures of rhythm processing.•Delta oscillations encode and track temporal regularities in the acoustic environment.•Mu oscillations reveal superimposed accentuation patterns on isochronous sequences.•Similar neurophysiological responses favor the phylogenesis of human rhythm cognition.
ISSN:0301-0082
1873-5118
DOI:10.1016/j.pneurobio.2023.102502