Differential reliance of chimpanzees and humans on automatic and deliberate control of motor actions |
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Authors: | Takaaki Kaneko Masaki Tomonaga |
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Affiliation: | Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Inuyama, Aichi 484-8506, Japan |
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Abstract: | Humans are often unaware of how they control their limb motor movements. People pay attention to their own motor movements only when their usual motor routines encounter errors. Yet little is known about the extent to which voluntary actions rely on automatic control and when automatic control shifts to deliberate control in nonhuman primates. In this study, we demonstrate that chimpanzees and humans showed similar limb motor adjustment in response to feedback error during reaching actions, whereas attentional allocation inferred from gaze behavior differed. We found that humans shifted attention to their own motor kinematics as errors were induced in motor trajectory feedback regardless of whether the errors actually disrupted their reaching their action goals. In contrast, chimpanzees shifted attention to motor execution only when errors actually interfered with their achieving a planned action goal. These results indicate that the species differed in their criteria for shifting from automatic to deliberate control of motor actions. It is widely accepted that sophisticated motor repertoires have evolved in humans. Our results suggest that the deliberate monitoring of one’s own motor kinematics may have evolved in the human lineage. |
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Keywords: | Self-monitoring Chimpanzees Agency Voluntary action Imitation Mirror system |
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