PSYCHOLOGIA
Online ISSN : 1347-5916
Print ISSN : 0033-2852
ISSN-L : 0033-2852
SPECIAL ISSUE: NEUROSCIENCE ON EMOTION
Guest Editor: Hideki Ohira
MONKEYS EXHIBIT PREFERENCE FOR BIOLOGICALLY NON-SIGNIFICANT VISUAL STIMULI
Mika TAKEBAYASHIShintaro FUNAHASHI
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2009 Volume 52 Issue 2 Pages 147-161

Details
Abstract
Positive feeling is derived not only from biologically significant causes but also from biologically non-significant causes (e.g., seeing preferred stimuli). To neurobiologically examine whether or not the preference for biologically non-significant neutral stimuli is related to positive emotion which arises when monkeys see preferred stimuli, we first determined whether monkeys exhibit preference for biologically non-significant fractal stimuli. We presented 2 fractal stimuli simultaneously and asked monkeys to select one of them by eye movements and look at the selected stimulus for up to 12 sec. Monkeys exhibited different percentages of correct performances to different stimuli. The rank orders of the stimuli estimated by the percentage of correct performance were maintained throughout many sessions. The rank orders of the stimuli were not related to the exposure effect or stimulus-reward association. These results indicate that monkeys exhibited preference for fractal stimuli and that the rank orders of the stimuli estimated by the percentage of correct performance reflect the strength of monkey's preference for the stimuli. This method allows us to determine monkey's preference for biologically non-significant neutral stimuli to perform neurobiological experiments for examining whether this preference is related to positive emotion.
Content from these authors
© 2009 by the PSYCHOLOGIA SOCIETY
Previous article
feedback
Top