INFANT MACAQUE MONKEYS RESPOND TO PICTORIAL DEPTH |
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Authors: | Virginia M. Gunderson Albert Yonas Patricia L. Sargent Kimberly S. Grant-Webster |
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Affiliation: | Child Development and Mental Retardation Center, Regional Primate Research Center, University of Washington;Institute of Child Development. University of Minnesota, University of Washington;Department of Environmental Health, University of Washington |
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Abstract: | Abstract— The studies described here are the first to demonstrate that a nonhuman primate species is capable of responding to pictorial depth information during infancy. In two experiments, pigtailed macaque (Macaca nemestrina) infants were tested for responsivity to the pictorial depth cites of texture gradient/linear perspective and relative size. The procedures were adapted from human studies and are based on the proclivity of infants to reach more frequently to closer objects than to objects that are farther away. The stimulus displays included two equidistant objects that, when viewed monocularly, appear separated in space because of an illusion created by pictorial depth cues. When presented with these displays, animals reached significantly more often to the apparently closer objects under monocular conditions than under binocular conditions. These findings suggest that infant macaques are sensitive to pictorial depth information, the implication being that this ability has ancient phytogenetic origins and ix not learned from exposure to the conventions of Western art. |
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