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Spontaneous object recognition in capuchin monkeys: assessing the effects of sex, familiarization phase and retention delay

The spontaneous object recognition (SOR) task is a versatile and widely used memory test that was only recently established in nonhuman primates (marmosets). Here, we extended these initial findings by assessing the performance of adult capuchin monkeys on the SOR task and three potentially interven...

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Published in:Animal cognition 2023-03, Vol.26 (2), p.551-561
Main Authors: Aquino, Jéssica, Moreira, Matheus A., Evangelista, Nathália C. L., Maior, Rafael S., Barros, Marilia
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description The spontaneous object recognition (SOR) task is a versatile and widely used memory test that was only recently established in nonhuman primates (marmosets). Here, we extended these initial findings by assessing the performance of adult capuchin monkeys on the SOR task and three potentially intervening task parameters–object familiarization phase, retention delay and sex. In Experiment 1, after an initial 10-min familiarization period with two identical objects and a pre-established retention delay (0.5, 6 or 24 h), the capuchins preferentially explored a new rather than the familiar object during a 10-min test trial, regardless of delay length. In Experiment 2, the capuchins were again exposed to two identical objects (but now for 10 or 20 min), then a 30-min retention delay and a 10-min test trial. An exploratory preference for the new over the familiar item was not affected by the length of the familiarization interval, possibly because overall exploration remained the same. However, the amount of initial object exploration was not related to task performance, and both males and females performed similarly on the SOR task with a 10-min familiarization, 30-min delay and 10-min test trial. Therefore, male and female capuchins recognize objects on the SOR task after both short and long delays, whereas a twofold increase in the familiarization phase does not affect task performance. The results also provide further support for the use of incidental learning paradigms to assess recognition memory in nonhuman primates.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10071-022-01697-3
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subjects Animals
Behavioral Sciences
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Cebinae
Delay
Exploratory Behavior
Female
Females
Life Sciences
Male
Monkeys
Monkeys & apes
Object recognition
Original Paper
Pattern recognition
Performance assessment
Primates
Psychology Research
Recognition, Psychology
Retention
Sex
Visual Perception
Zoology
title Spontaneous object recognition in capuchin monkeys: assessing the effects of sex, familiarization phase and retention delay
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