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Dark-habituation increases the dark-background-contingent upshift of gaze in macaque monkeys
- Source :
- Vision Research. 188:262-273
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2021.
-
Abstract
- What is the effect of prior experience on sensorimotor behavior? We studied the following intriguing behavior: monkeys fixating a small target direct their gaze above the target if the background is dark. Fixating a target once on a bright background, then on a dark background, yields 2 gaze directions, typically one above the other; hence the name, ‘dark-background-contingent upshift of gaze', which is abbreviated as ‘upshift’. Is the upshift only an attempt to avoid using the fovea in the dark? If it is, we might expect to also observe a downshift and a sideshift. We studied gaze direction in a large group of 10 rhesus monkeys from Tubingen, to which we added published data from 4 cynomolgus monkeys from Rehovot. The upshift was ubiquitous, and there was no systematic sideshift. What is the function of the upshift? Is it related to vision in the dark? Here, we concentrate on the effect of the monkeys’ previous training. Seven of the 14 monkeys were accustomed to working in the dark (‘dark-habituated’), while the other 7 had worked in bright ambient light (‘bright-habituated’). The main result of this study is that the dark-habituated monkeys had a much larger upshift: the mean upshift was 2.2° in the dark-habituated monkeys, versus 0.5° in the bright-habituated. Thus, the upshift depends on habituation; the size of the upshift reflects months-long cumulative experience. These findings suggest that the function of the upshift is indeed related to seeing in the dark.
- Subjects :
- genetic structures
biology
Eye movement
Fixation, Ocular
Macaca mulatta
Macaque
Gaze
Sensory Systems
Macaca fascicularis
Ophthalmology
biology.animal
Fixation (visual)
Animals
sense organs
Scotopic vision
Habituation
Habituation, Psychophysiologic
Psychology
Large group
Neuroscience
Vision, Ocular
Photopic vision
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00426989
- Volume :
- 188
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Vision Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6ef62302167be7b803dd17f63209ced8