| Literature DB >> 28498964 |
Ha Trong Dinh1, Hiroshi Nishimaru1, Jumpei Matsumoto1, Yusaku Takamura1, Quan Van Le1,2, Etsuro Hori1, Rafael S Maior3,4, Carlos Tomaz3,5, Anh Hai Tran1,2, Taketoshi Ono1, Hisao Nishijo1.
Abstract
Snakes and conspecific faces are quickly and efficiently detected in primates. Because the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) has been implicated in attentional allocation to biologically relevant stimuli, we hypothesized that it might also be highly responsive to snakes and conspecific faces. In this study, neuronal responses in the monkey mPFC were recorded, while monkeys discriminated 8 categories of visual stimuli. Here, we show that the monkey mPFC neuronal responses to snakes and conspecific faces were unique. First, the ratios of the neurons that responded strongly to snakes and monkey faces were greater than those of the neurons that responded strongly to the other stimuli. Second, mPFC neurons responded stronger and faster to snakes and monkey faces than the other categories of stimuli. Third, neuronal responses to snakes were unaffected by low-pass filtering of the images. Finally, activity patterns of responsive mPFC neurons discriminated snakes from the other stimuli in the second 50 ms period and monkey faces in the third period after stimulus onset. These response features indicate that the mPFC processes fast and coarse visual information of snakes and monkey faces, and support the hypothesis that snakes and social environments have shaped the primate visual system over evolutionary time.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 28498964 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhx118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357