Abstract

Non-human primates (NHPs), especially rhesus macaques, have significantly contributed to our understanding of the neural computations underlying human vision. Besides the established homologies in the visual brain areas between these species and our ability to probe detailed neural mechanisms in monkeys at multiple scales, NHPs' ability to perform human-like visual behavior makes them an extremely appealing animal model of human vision. Traditionally, such behavioral studies have been conducted in controlled laboratory settings, offering experimenters tight control over variables like luminance, eye movements, and auditory interference. However, in-lab experiments have several constraints, including limited experimental time, the need for dedicated human experimenters, additional lab space requirements, invasive surgeries for head-post implants, and extra time and training for chairing and head restraints. To overcome these limitations, we propose adopting home-cage behavioral training and testing of NHPs, enabling the administration of many vision-based behavioral tasks simultaneously across multiple monkeys with reduced human personnel requirements, no NHP head restraint, and monkeys' unrestricted access to experiments. In this article, we present a portable, low-cost, easy-to-use kiosk system developed to conduct home-cage vision-based behavioral tasks in NHPs. We provide details of its operation and build to enable more open-source development of this technology. Furthermore, we present validation results using behavioral measurements performed in the lab and in NHP home cages, demonstrating the system's reliability and potential to enhance the efficiency and flexibility of NHP behavioral research.

Full Text
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