Eye preferences in common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus): influence of age, stimulus, and hand preference. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Eye preferences of the common marmoset ( Callithrix jacchus ) were examined, taking into account age, arousal, and hand preference. Monocular eye use for looking through a small hole at a stimulus was recorded. Of 21 marmosets, 20 displayed right-eye preferences for viewing a piece of familiar food. In subjects tested at 3-8, 12, 15-18, and 22 months, eye preferences were consistent across age. A group bias, indicative of right-eyedness, was also found for viewing other stimuli. The stimuli included a watch, mirror, model of a beetle, and the experimenter's hand. However, when the marmosets viewed a threatening stimulus, a model resembling two rearing snakes, they displayed increased arousal (indicated by longer duration between monocular viewing events and increased incidence of aroused vocalisations) and the eye preferences shifted away from a preference for the right eye to either no preference or a left-eye preference. No relationship between eye preference and hand preference for holding food was found. Therefore, we suggest that eye preferences may reflect hemispheric specialisations for perceptual processing, according to the emotional valence of the stimulus.

published proceedings

  • Laterality

author list (cited authors)

  • Hook-Costigan, M. A., & Rogers, L. J.

citation count

  • 60

complete list of authors

  • Hook-Costigan, MA||Rogers, LJ

publication date

  • January 1998