Abstract

The variability of period of the free-running circadian activity rhythm (CAR) and the degree to which it is affected by social factors was studied in diurnal marmosets (Callithrix jacchus: Primates, Cebidae), kept either singly or in pairs. Under continuous light intensities between 10-1 and 102 lx, the spontaneous period was always shorter than 24h. It varied in relation to the amount of time spent under constant conditions (after-effects). There was some evidence of an effect of light intensity on free-running period, but no clear correlation between the two. Mutual acoustic social contact caused some males to exhibit pseudo-splitting, ascribable to positive social masking, and in many cases also resulted in relative coordination of the free-running CAR. True social entrainment, however, was not produced. The possibility that the latter could occur under some conditions is discussed, as well as the neural pathways that might mediate the observed acoustically induced social effects on the central nervous system pacemaker(s) of the circadian timing system.

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