HUSCAP logo Hokkaido Univ. logo

Hokkaido University Collection of Scholarly and Academic Papers >
Graduate School of Medicine / Faculty of Medicine >
Peer-reviewed Journal Articles, etc >

Temporal Generalization of Synchronized Saccades Beyond the Trained Range in Monkeys

This item is licensed under:Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

Files in This Item:
fpsyg-09-02172.pdf1.36 MBPDFView/Open
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:http://hdl.handle.net/2115/72225

Title: Temporal Generalization of Synchronized Saccades Beyond the Trained Range in Monkeys
Authors: Takeya, Ryuji Browse this author
Patel, Aniruddh D. Browse this author
Tanaka, Masaki Browse this author →KAKEN DB
Keywords: prediction
synchronization
rhythm
entrainment
learning
eye movement
primate
Issue Date: 6-Nov-2018
Publisher: Frontiers Media
Journal Title: Frontiers in Psychology
Volume: 9
Start Page: 2172
Publisher DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02172
Abstract: Synchronized movements with external periodic rhythms, such as dancing to a beat, are commonly observed in daily life. Although it has been well established that some vocal learning species (including parrots and humans) spontaneously develop this ability, it has only recently been shown that monkeys are also capable of predictive and tempo-flexible synchronization to periodic stimuli. In our previous study, monkeys were trained to make predictive saccades for alternately presented visual stimuli at fixed stimulus onset asynchronies (SOAs) to obtain a liquid reward. The monkeys generalized predictive synchronization to novel SOAs in the middle of trained range, suggesting a capacity for tempo-flexible synchronization. However, it is possible that when encountering a novel tempo, the monkeys might sample learned saccade sequences from those for the short and long SOAs so that the mean saccade interval matched the untrained SOA. To eliminate this possibility, in the current study we tested monkeys on novel SOAs outside the trained range. Animals were trained to generate synchronized eye movements for 600 and 900-ms SOAs for a few weeks, and then were tested for longer SOAs. The accuracy and precision of predictive saccades for one untrained SOA (1200 ms) were comparable to those for the trained conditions. On the other hand, the variance of predictive saccade latency and the proportion of reactive saccades increased significantly in the longer SOA conditions (1800 and 2400 ms), indicating that temporal prediction of periodic stimuli was difficult in this range, similar to previous results on synchronized tapping in humans. Our results suggest that monkeys might share similar synchronization mechanisms with humans, which can be subject to physiological examination in future studies.
Rights: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Type: article
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2115/72225
Appears in Collections:医学院・医学研究院 (Graduate School of Medicine / Faculty of Medicine) > 雑誌発表論文等 (Peer-reviewed Journal Articles, etc)

Submitter: 竹谷 隆司

Export metadata:

OAI-PMH ( junii2 , jpcoar_1.0 )

MathJax is now OFF:


 

 - Hokkaido University