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Fixations Gate Species-Specific Responses to Free Viewing of Faces in the Human and Macaque Amygdala.


ABSTRACT: Neurons in the primate amygdala respond prominently to faces. This implicates the amygdala in the processing of socially significant stimuli, yet its contribution to social perception remains poorly understood. We evaluated the representation of faces in the primate amygdala during naturalistic conditions by recording from both human and macaque amygdala neurons during free viewing of identical arrays of images with concurrent eye tracking. Neurons responded to faces only when they were fixated, suggesting that neuronal activity was gated by visual attention. Further experiments in humans utilizing covert attention confirmed this hypothesis. In both species, the majority of face-selective neurons preferred faces of conspecifics, a bias also seen behaviorally in first fixation preferences. Response latencies, relative to fixation onset, were shortest for conspecific-selective neurons and were ?100 ms shorter in monkeys compared to humans. This argues that attention to faces gates amygdala responses, which in turn prioritize species-typical information for further processing.

SUBMITTER: Minxha J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5283067 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Fixations Gate Species-Specific Responses to Free Viewing of Faces in the Human and Macaque Amygdala.

Minxha Juri J   Mosher Clayton C   Morrow Jeremiah K JK   Mamelak Adam N AN   Adolphs Ralph R   Gothard Katalin M KM   Rutishauser Ueli U  

Cell reports 20170101 4


Neurons in the primate amygdala respond prominently to faces. This implicates the amygdala in the processing of socially significant stimuli, yet its contribution to social perception remains poorly understood. We evaluated the representation of faces in the primate amygdala during naturalistic conditions by recording from both human and macaque amygdala neurons during free viewing of identical arrays of images with concurrent eye tracking. Neurons responded to faces only when they were fixated,  ...[more]

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