Abstract

Head-cocking is rotation of the head about the rostrocaudal axis with a fixed direction of orientation. The behavior is a response to either visual or auditory stimuli according to species. Although head-cocking is prevalent in small primates, its functional significance is unclear. We studied head-cocking in response to a variety of novel visual and acoustic stimuli in Garnett's greater bush babies (Otolemur garnettii). We systematically varied stimulus type (animate vs. inanimate image) and mode of presentation (NON-VIDEO vs. VIDEO) to assess their effects on the head-cocking response. A higher incidence of head-cocking occurred with novel animal images and for NON-VIDEO presentations. Acoustic stimuli suppressed rather than facilitated head-cocking. Juveniles head-cocked much more than adults did. Clearly head-cocking in Otolemur garnettii is primarily involved in visual rather than auditory function. It does not serve simple sensory/perceptual functions such as depth perception or acuity. Instead, in consideration of the importance of novelty to the elicitation of the behavior, the higher incidence in younger animals, and the structure of the visual system, we propose that head-cocking is a motor strategy to encode the parameters of novel images in the process of form learning.

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