| Literature DB >> 32234478 |
Taketsugu Hayashi1, Ryota Akikawa2, Keisuke Kawasaki3, Jun Egawa4, Takafumi Minamimoto5, Kazuto Kobayashi6, Shigeki Kato6, Yukiko Hori5, Yuji Nagai5, Atsuhiko Iijima7, Toshiyuki Someya8, Isao Hasegawa9.
Abstract
The ability to infer others' mental states is essential to social interactions. This ability, critically evaluated by testing whether one attributes false beliefs (FBs) to others, has been considered to be uniquely hominid and to accompany the activation of a distributed brain network. We challenge the taxon specificity of this ability and identify the causal brain locus by introducing an anticipatory-looking FB paradigm combined with chemogenetic neuronal manipulation in macaque monkeys. We find spontaneous gaze bias of macaques implicitly anticipating others' FB-driven actions. Silencing of the medial prefrontal neuronal activity with inhibitory designer receptor exclusively activated by designer drugs (DREADDs) specifically eliminates the implicit gaze bias while leaving the animals' visually guided and memory-guided tracking abilities intact. Thus, neuronal activity in the medial prefrontal cortex could have a causal role in FB-attribution-like behaviors in the primate lineage, emphasizing the importance of probing the neuronal mechanisms underlying theory of mind with relevant macaque animal models.Keywords: DREADDs; anticipatory-looking; chemogenetic silencing; false belief; gaze bias; hM4Di; macaque; medial prefrontal cortex; non-human primate; theory of mind
Year: 2020 PMID: 32234478 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.03.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423