Action Categorization in Rhesus Monkeys: discrimination of grasping from non-grasping manual motor acts

The ability to recognize others’ actions is an important aspect of social behavior. While neurophysiological and behavioral research in monkeys has offered a better understanding of how the primate brain processes this type of information, further insight with respect to the neural correlates of act...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2017-11, Vol.7 (1), p.15094-10, Article 15094
Hauptverfasser: Nelissen, Koen, Vanduffel, Wim
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description The ability to recognize others’ actions is an important aspect of social behavior. While neurophysiological and behavioral research in monkeys has offered a better understanding of how the primate brain processes this type of information, further insight with respect to the neural correlates of action recognition requires tasks that allow recording of brain activity or perturbing brain regions while monkeys simultaneously make behavioral judgements about certain aspects of observed actions. Here we investigated whether rhesus monkeys could actively discriminate videos showing grasping or non-grasping manual motor acts in a two-alternative categorization task. After monkeys became proficient in this task, we tested their ability to generalize to a number of untrained, novel videos depicting grasps or other manual motor acts. Monkeys generalized to a wide range of novel human or conspecific grasping and non-grasping motor acts. They failed, however, for videos showing unfamiliar actions such as a non-biological effector performing a grasp, or a human hand touching an object with the back of the hand. This study shows the feasibility of training monkeys to perform active judgements about certain aspects of observed actions, instrumental for causal investigations into the neural correlates of action recognition.
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subjects 631/378/2645
631/378/3919
Animals
Behavior
Brain
Brain - physiology
Brain Mapping
Discrimination (Psychology) - physiology
Discrimination Learning - physiology
Experiments
Feasibility studies
Grasping
Hand - physiology
Hand Strength - physiology
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humans
Macaca mulatta
Male
Monkeys & apes
multidisciplinary
Photic Stimulation - methods
Psychomotor Performance - physiology
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Social behavior
title Action Categorization in Rhesus Monkeys: discrimination of grasping from non-grasping manual motor acts
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