Performance error-related activity in monkey striatum during social interactions

被引:0
|
作者
Raymundo Báez-Mendoza
Wolfram Schultz
机构
[1] Development and Neuroscience,Department of Physiology
[2] University of Cambridge,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Monitoring our performance is fundamental to motor control while monitoring other’s performance is fundamental to social coordination. The striatum is hypothesized to play a role in action selection, action initiation, and action parsing, but we know little of its role in performance monitoring. Furthermore, the striatum contains neurons that respond to own and other’s actions. Therefore, we asked if striatal neurons signal own and conspecific’s performance errors. Two macaque monkeys sitting across a touch-sensitive table in plain view of each other took turns performing a simple motor task to obtain juice rewards while we recorded single striatal neurons from one monkey at a time. Both monkeys made more errors after individually making an error but made fewer errors after a conspecific error. Thus, monkeys’ behavior was influenced by their own and their conspecific’s past behavior. A population of striatal neurons responded to own and conspecific’s performance errors independently of a negative reward prediction error signal. Overall, these data suggest that monkeys are influenced by social errors and that striatal neurons signal performance errors. These signals might be important for social coordination, observational learning and adjusting to an ever-changing social landscape.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Performance error-related activity in monkey striatum during social interactions
    Baez-Mendoza, Raymundo
    Schultz, Wolfram
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2016, 6
  • [2] Error-related electrocorticographic activity in humans during continuous movements
    Milekovic, Tomislav
    Ball, Tonio
    Schulze-Bonhage, Andreas
    Aertsen, Ad
    Mehring, Carsten
    JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING, 2012, 9 (02)
  • [3] Error-related cardiac deceleration: Functional interplay between error-related brain activity and autonomic nervous system in performance monitoring
    Di Gregorio, Francesco
    Steinhauser, Marco
    Maier, Martin E.
    Thayer, Julian F.
    Battaglia, Simone
    NEUROSCIENCE AND BIOBEHAVIORAL REVIEWS, 2024, 157
  • [4] Neuron activity in the monkey striatum during parallel performance of actions
    Tolkunov B.F.
    Orlov A.A.
    Afanas'ev S.V.
    Neuroscience and Behavioral Physiology, 1997, 27 (3) : 297 - 302
  • [5] Anxiety and error-related brain activity
    Hajcak, G
    McDonald, N
    Simons, RF
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2003, 64 (1-2) : 77 - 90
  • [6] Reliability of error-related brain activity
    Olvet, Doreen M.
    Hajcak, Greg
    BRAIN RESEARCH, 2009, 1284 : 89 - 99
  • [7] PERFECTIONISM AND ERROR-RELATED BRAIN ACTIVITY
    Stanley, Emily
    Hope, Colleen
    Beasley, Madeline
    Aflaki, Pary
    Danby, Lindsey
    Crickman, Peyton
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2019, 56 : S89 - S89
  • [8] Induced error-related theta activity, not error-related negativity, predicts task performance as well as anxiety and worry during real-life stress in a youth sample
    Shner-Livne, Gil
    Buzzell, George A.
    Fox, Nathan A.
    Shechner, Tomer
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2024, 61 (04)
  • [9] Error-related brain activity and error awareness in an error classification paradigm
    Di Gregorio, Francesco
    Steinhauser, Marco
    Maier, Martin E.
    NEUROIMAGE, 2016, 139 : 202 - 210
  • [10] Altered error-related activity in patients with schizophrenia
    Koch, Kathrin
    Wagner, Gerd
    Schultz, Christoph
    Schachtzabel, Claudia
    Nenadic, Igor
    Axer, Martina
    Reichenbach, Juergen R.
    Sauer, Heinrich
    Schloesser, Ralf G. M.
    NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2009, 47 (13) : 2843 - 2849