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Anticipating future actions: Motor planning improves with age in wild bearded capuchin monkeys (Sapajus libidinosus).

Valentina TruppaGloria SabbatiniPatricia IzarDorothy Munkenbeck FragaszyElisabetta Visalberghi
Published in: Developmental science (2021)
Self-directed object manipulation tasks illuminate development of motor planning. Grasping strategies that lead to good object control to perform the following action(s) reveal second-order motor planning. Motor planning for efficient grips develops slowly in children. Age-related differences in other primates have been poorly investigated. Here, we investigated anticipatory motor planning of infant, juvenile and adult wild capuchin monkeys grasping a horizontally positioned stick baited to the left or right side (a version of the elevated spoon task). We recorded the grasps capuchins used to bring the baited end of the stick to the mouth. The percentage of efficient radial grips positively correlated with age and adults used efficient grips significantly more frequently than infants. Adult wild capuchins' use of radial grips was higher than that reported for adult captive capuchins in similar tasks, suggesting that experience throughout life may influence motor anticipation. Self-directed object manipulation tasks will be useful to compare this aspect of cognition across primates. A video abstract of this article can be viewed at https://youtu.be/a1Zbr_AQkb8.
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • young adults
  • gene expression
  • mass spectrometry
  • atomic force microscopy
  • white matter
  • genetic diversity