Abstract

Humans interpret others’ goals based on motion information, and this capacity contributes to our mental reasoning. The present study sought to determine whether Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) perceive goal-directedness in chasing events depicted by two geometric particles. In Experiment 1, two monkeys and adult humans were trained to discriminate between Chasing and Random sequences. We then introduced probe stimuli with various levels of correlation between the particle trajectories to examine whether participants performed the task using higher correlation. Participants chose stimuli with the highest correlations by chance, suggesting that correlations were not the discriminative cue. Experiment 2 examined whether participants focused on particle proximity. Participants differentiated between Chasing and Control sequences; the distance between two particles was identical in both. Results indicated that, like humans, the Japanese macaques did not use physical cues alone to perform the discrimination task and integrated the cues spontaneously. This suggests that goal attribution resulting from motion information is a widespread cognitive phenotype in primate species.

Highlights

  • The actions and behaviours of other organisms provide information concerning a wide range of adaptive behaviours, such as preying and mating

  • We calculated the degree of similarity (DoS) within each stimulus, which indicated the correlation between the trajectories of two particles[18]

  • A pilot study using human participants (N = 7) who were naïve to the purpose of the present study and the experimental task revealed that an increase in DoS improved the intensity of goal directedness

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Summary

Introduction

The actions and behaviours of other organisms provide information concerning a wide range of adaptive behaviours, such as preying and mating. Primate researches have shown that chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) encode the goals of inanimate moving entities[14,15], and common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) showed sensitivity to the goals of a robot agent with bodily features[16,17] These non-human primate researches employed the looking-time paradigm, which is frequently used in of human infancy studies. A pilot study using human participants (N = 7) who were naïve to the purpose of the present study and the experimental task revealed that an increase in DoS improved the intensity of goal directedness (see Supplementary information for the pilot study) Their evaluation of stimuli with the highest correlations (1.0 DoS) was significantly low. We produced movies with either Chasing or Random sequences (see Supplementary information for details and an example of stimuli; see Videos 1 and 2)

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