| Literature DB >> 22174913 |
Annika Paukner1, Pier F Ferrari, Stephen J Suomi.
Abstract
Human infants are capable of accurately matching facial gestures of an experimenter within a few hours after birth, a phenomenon called neonatal imitation. Recent studies have suggested that rather than being a simple reflexive-like behavior, infants exert active control over imitative responses and 'provoke' previously imitated gestures even after a delay of up to 24 h. Delayed imitation is regarded as the hallmark of a sophisticated capacity to control and flexibly engage in affective communication and has been described as an indicator of innate protoconversational readiness. However, we are not the only primates to exhibit neonatal imitation, and delayed imitation abilities may not be uniquely human. Here we report that 1-week-old infant rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) who show immediate imitation of a lipsmacking gesture also show delayed imitation of lipsmacking, facilitated by a tendency to refrain from lipsmacking toward a still face during baseline measurements. Individual differences in delayed imitation suggest that differentially matured cortical mechanisms may be involved, allowing some newborns macaques to actively participate in communicative exchanges from birth. Macaque infants are endowed with basic social competencies of intersubjective communication that indicate cognitive and emotional commonality between humans and macaques, which may have evolved to nurture an affective mother-infant relationship in primates.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22174913 PMCID: PMC3236225 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028848
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Illustration of the experimental conditions and LPS responses for all infants.
A. Illustration of modeled gestures. LPS: lipsmacking. TP: tongue protrusion. CTRL: control condition in which a disk was presented in front of the infant during the baseline period. During the stimulus period, the disk was rotated both clock and counter-clockwise. B. Illustration of an example LPS trial with durations of each phase. C. Average response rates of LPS per 40 sec +/− SEM in LPS, TP, and CTRL conditions for all infants (N = 60) across time periods.
Figure 2Average response rates of LPS per 40 sec +/− SEM broken down into Imitators (left, N = 33) and Non-imitators (right, N = 27) in LPS, TP, and CTRL conditions across time periods.
Average increase of LPS responses for a subset of imitators (N = 18) and non-imitators (N = 13).
| Immediate Imitation | 1 Minute Delayed Imitation | 24 h Delayed Imitation | |
|
| 1.87 (1.82) | 1.85 (2.16) | 0 (1.22) |
|
| 0.71 (1.05) | −0.65 (1.51) | −0.23 (4.88) |
Standard deviations are given in parentheses.
Immediate Imitation = average increase between Baseline 1 and Stimulus from all test days.
1 Minute Delayed Imitation = average increase between Baseline 1 and Return from all test days.
24 h Delayed Imitation = average increase between Baseline 1 and Baseline 1 when two test days were 24 h apart.