Abstract

Visual bias in social cognition studies is often interpreted to indicate preference, yet it is difficult to elucidate whether this translates to social preference. Moreover, visual bias is often framed in terms of surprise or recognition. It is thus important to examine whether an interpretation of preference is warranted in looking time studies. Here, using touchscreen training, we examined (1) looking time to non-social images in an image viewing task, and (2) preference of non-social images in a paired choice task, in captive long-tailed macaques, Macaca fascicularis. In a touchscreen test phase, we examined (3) looking time to social images in a viewing task, and (4) preference of social images in a paired choice task. Finally, we examined (5) looking time to social images in a non-test environment. For social content, the monkeys did not exhibit clear preferences for any category (conspecific/heterospecific, in-group/outgroup, kin/non-kin, young/old) in the explicit choice paradigm, nor did they differentiate between images in the viewing tasks, thus hampering our interpretation of the data. Post-hoc analysis of the training data however revealed a visual bias towards images of food and objects over landscapes in the viewing task. Similarly, across choice-task training sessions, food and object images were chosen more frequently than landscapes. This suggests that the monkeys’ gaze may indeed indicate preference, but this only became apparent for non-social stimuli. Why these monkeys had no biases in the social domain remains enigmatic. To better answer questions about attention to social stimuli, we encourage future research to examine behavioral measures alongside looking time.

Highlights

  • In social cognition research, differential allocation of visual attention has become a popular way to measure response to stimuli (Winters et al, 2015)

  • Using data from viewing task 2, we examined the relationship between looking time to social images, and selection of social images in Choice task 2

  • There was no relationship between tasks that assessed (1) looking time to, and (2) choices between images of social content. This lack of relationship is likely explained by the absence of variance in responses – there were no patterns in either task indicating visual bias or preference for any of the social categories

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Summary

General Method Participants

We collected data from a group of 36 long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) housed at the German Primate Center, Göttingen. Panel C: Viewing task 1 on the Elo touch screen and Panel D: on the XBI. Panel G: Free view task: (left) viewing apparatus; (middle) set up: (a) experimenter, (b) test monkey, (c) image held in frame, (d) camcorder; (right) participating monkey. For the touch screen tasks, monkeys were trained and tested individually. All monkeys received prior training on the touch screen before commencing any task. Our analyses excluded images the monkeys did not look at. For viewing task 1, choice tasks 1 and 2, and visual bias to image category in viewing task 2, we set the number of adaptive Gauss-Hermite quadrature points to zero to aid model convergence. Viewing Task 1 We examined looking time to images in the first training session only, when the images were novel (see Appendix for details about further sessions)

Participants
Design and Procedure
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Conflict of Interest
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