𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Visual laterality in dolphins: importance of the familiarity of stimuli

✍ Scribed by Catherine Blois-Heulin; Mélodie Crével; Martin Böye; Alban Lemasson


Publisher
BioMed Central
Year
2012
Tongue
English
Weight
247 KB
Volume
13
Category
Article
ISSN
1471-2202

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Background

Many studies of cerebral asymmetries in different species lead, on the one hand, to a better understanding of the functions of each cerebral hemisphere and, on the other hand, to develop an evolutionary history of hemispheric laterality. Our animal model is particularly interesting because of its original evolutionary path, i.e. return to aquatic life after a terrestrial phase. The rare reports concerning visual laterality of marine mammals investigated mainly discrimination processes. As dolphins are migrant species they are confronted to a changing environment. Being able to categorize new versus familiar objects would allow dolphins a rapid adaptation to novel environments. Visual laterality could be a prerequisite to this adaptability. To date, no study, to our knowledge, has analyzed the environmental factors that could influence their visual laterality.

Results

We investigated visual laterality expressed spontaneously at the water surface by a group of five common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in response to various stimuli. The stimuli presented ranged from very familiar objects (known and manipulated previously) to familiar objects (known but never manipulated) to unfamiliar objects (unknown, never seen previously). At the group level, dolphins used their left eye to observe very familiar objects and their right eye to observe unfamiliar objects. However, eyes are used indifferently to observe familiar objects with intermediate valence.

Conclusion

Our results suggest different visual cerebral processes based either on the global shape of well-known objects or on local details of unknown objects. Moreover, the manipulation of an object appears necessary for these dolphins to construct a global representation of an object enabling its immediate categorization for subsequent use. Our experimental results pointed out some cognitive capacities of dolphins which might be crucial for their wild life given their fission-fusion social system and migratory behaviour.


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Intermodulation components of the visual
✍ Vance Zemon; Floyd Ratliff 📂 Article 📅 1984 🏛 Springer-Verlag 🌐 English ⚖ 1010 KB

Nonlinear interactions in the human visual system were studied using visual evoked potentials (VEPs). In one experiment (superimposed condition), all segments of a dartboard pattern were contrast reversed in time by a sum of two sinusoidal signals. In a second experiment (lateral condition), segment

Influence of the presentation of remote
✍ G. Rizzolatti; R. Camarda 📂 Article 📅 1977 🏛 Springer-Verlag 🌐 English ⚖ 959 KB

Single units were recorded extracellularly from area 17 and lateral suprasylvian area (LSSA) in curarized cats. Visual stimuli, usually a 10 degree black spot, were introduced abruptly in the visual field remote from the discharge area of a neuron's receptive field and moved at a speed of about 30 d