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Disentangling perceptual awareness from nonconscious processing in rhesus monkeys ( <i>Macaca mulatta</i> )

Moshe Shay Ben-Haim, Olga Dal Monte, Nicholas Fagan, Yarrow Dunham, Ran R. Hassin, Steve W. C. Chang, Laurie R. Santos

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences82 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance Many animals perform complex intelligent behaviors, but the question of whether animals are aware while doing so remains a long debated but unanswered question. Here, we develop a new approach to assess whether nonhuman animals have awareness by utilizing a well-known double dissociation of visual awareness—cases in which people behave in completely opposite ways when stimuli are processed consciously versus nonconsciously. Using this method, we found that a nonhuman species—the rhesus monkey—exhibits the very same behavioral signature of both nonconscious and conscious processing. This opposite double dissociation of awareness firstly allows stripping away the long inherent ambiguity when interpreting the processes governing animal behavior. Collectively, it provides robust support for two distinct awareness modes in nonhuman animals.

Topics & Concepts

AmbiguityPerceptionPsychologyDissociation (chemistry)Nonhuman primateCognitive psychologyNeuroscienceBiologyComputer scienceEvolutionary biologyChemistryProgramming languagePhysical chemistryNeural dynamics and brain functionPrimate Behavior and EcologyMemory and Neural Mechanisms
Disentangling perceptual awareness from nonconscious processing in rhesus monkeys ( <i>Macaca mulatta</i> ) | Litcius