Abstract
The social brain hypothesis posits that dedicated neural systems process social information. In support of this, neurophysiological data have shown that some brain regions are specialized for representing faces. It remains unknown, however, whether distinct anatomical substrates also represent more complex social variables, such as the hierarchical rank of individuals within a social group. Here we show that the primate amygdala encodes the hierarchical rank of individuals in the same neuronal ensembles that encode the rewards associated with nonsocial stimuli. By contrast, orbitofrontal and anterior cingulate cortices lack strong representations of hierarchical rank while still representing reward values. These results challenge the conventional view that dedicated neural systems process social information. Instead, information about hierarchical rank—which contributes to the assessment of the social value of individuals within a group—is linked in the amygdala to representations of rewards associated with nonsocial stimuli.
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Main
Human and nonhuman primates tend to live in large social groups that possess dominant and subordinate members1. In many settings, such as interviewing for a job or attending a family reunion, appropriate social interactions and emotional behavior depend upon an assessment of the hierarchical ranks of both oneself and the other people present. The hierarchical ranks of individuals and the accurate evaluation of the hierarchical ranks of others affect the ability to thrive—for example, by influencing fluid and food access, mating priority and defensive behavior2,3,4,5.
The assessment of hierarchical rank requires accurate identification of social group members. Primates are masters at recognizing identity based on faces6,7. Brain areas engaged during face processing include the occipital, fusiform and superior temporal sulcus face areas, as well as the amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15. The superior temporal sulcus is anatomically connected to brain areas implicated in social processing, including the anterior cingulate and orbitofrontal cortices (ACC and OFC) and the amygdala16,17,18. These connections may link representations of facial identity to neural circuits processing motivational and emotional information about nonsocial stimuli. For example, the amygdala, OFC and ACC all provide neural representations of the value of conditioned stimuli acquired through reinforcement learning19,20,21.
How and where neural representations of social variables more complex than facial identity—such as hierarchical rank—emerge in the brain is an enduring mystery. The social brain hypothesis posits that the evolution of large brains in mammals reflects increasingly complex social demands22, a proposal consistent with the discovery in primates of brain areas specialized for representing faces. In further support of this hypothesis, gray matter brain volume in human and nonhuman primates varies as a function of social status and/or social experiences23,24,25,26,27. However, the extent to which more complex social variables such as hierarchical rank are processed in specialized neural circuits remains unclear. Human neuroimaging studies indicate that the amygdala helps establish artificial hierarchies acquired during performance of a task in the laboratory28,29,30,31,32, but the amygdala’s role in representing naturally established hierarchies has not been demonstrated. It is possible that some social variables, such as the propensity to share rewards with a partner, may engage distinct neuronal ensembles14,33,34,35,36, but other social variables may not engage neuronal circuits dedicated to processing social information alone. Indeed, rewarding stimuli and stimuli that possess hierarchical information have been observed to modulate the same neuronal ensembles in brain areas such as OFC, striatum and the lateral intraparietal area12,14,35,37. In these experiments, however, neural responses to stimuli spanning a full social hierarchy were not examined, leaving unclear whether the studied neural ensembles in fact represent hierarchical rank per se.
Monkeys (and other primates) almost certainly learn the social rank of other group members through experience. This learning process may entail assigning group members different ‘values’ through experience, a process bearing resemblance to learning about the value of nonsocial stimuli. Here we provide evidence that the primate amygdala encodes the hierarchical rank of individuals in the same neuronal ensembles that also encode the rewards associated with nonsocial stimuli. By contrast, despite representing the rewards associated with nonsocial stimuli, OFC and ACC lack strong representations of hierarchical rank. These results challenge strong versions of the social brain hypothesis22, the traditional view that the processing of social stimuli occurs exclusively in dedicated neural systems. Instead, although some aspects of social processing may occur in distinct neural circuits, some complex social variables, such as hierarchical rank, may be represented by neuronal ensembles that also process nonsocial stimuli.
Results
Two rhesus monkeys who had lived in the same stable group of ten monkeys for many years performed a task in which they viewed, in different blocks of trials, images of the faces of other members of their group or fractal images predicting different reward amounts (Fig. 1a,b). The face images were neutral in expression and did not depict emotionally relevant expressions (see Methods). Viewer monkeys fixated for the first 400 ms of image presentation for all trials and then were permitted free viewing of the images for an additional 1,000 ms. Successful fixation resulted in delivery of one drop of liquid reward on face image trials or zero, one or two drops of liquid reward on fractal trials (depending upon the image). Anticipatory licking demonstrated that monkeys learned the different reward associations of the fractal images (Kruskal-Wallis test, P < 1 × 10–5, Supplementary Fig. 1).
The assessment of social hierarchy
Human observers scored hierarchical rank using established methodology that determined the winners of agonistic interactions between monkeys (Table 1 and Supplementary Table 1)38. We also used the oculomotor behavior of viewer monkeys during electrophysiological recording sessions to construct an index of the monkeys’ assessment of hierarchical rank of the face images. Several measures of viewer monkeys’ oculomotor behavior varied depending upon the face image being displayed (Fig. 1c and Methods)39. These measures capitalized on the fact that monkeys tended to look at the face images of dominant monkeys, that viewing dominant monkeys can be more arousing, and that the propensity to look at the eyes of an individual is modulated by hierarchical rank (Methods and Supplementary Fig. 2)40. The social status indices for each viewer monkey were significantly correlated (r = 0.72, P = 0.043; Fig. 1e), perhaps reflecting that the two viewer monkeys both were in the middle of the hierarchy (Table 1). Furthermore, the index constructed from oculomotor measures was correlated with the human scoring of hierarchical rank (r = 0.90, P = 0.002; Fig. 1d) and was not significantly correlated with monkey age or weight (r = 0.41, P = 0.305 and r = 0.071, P = 0.867, respectively). A behavioral experiment showed that the oculomotor measures obtained from viewer monkeys did not distinguish dominant from submissive monkeys if the faces displayed on the screen were unfamiliar to the viewer monkeys (Supplementary Fig. 3). The correlation of the social status index with a traditional scoring method of hierarchical organization by human observers provides strong evidence that during the electrophysiological recordings the viewer monkeys were actively assessing the hierarchical ranks of the monkeys depicted in the facial images.
Neural representations of social hierarchy and nonsocial value
While monkeys performed the fixation task, we recorded the responses of individual neurons in the amygdala (196 neurons), OFC (134 neurons) and ACC (187 neurons) to face images (Fig. 2a–c, left, and Supplementary Fig. 4). Across the populations of neurons, the proportion of neurons responsive to faces during fixation was higher in the amygdala than in OFC (z-test, z = 3.139, P = 0.002) or in ACC (z-test, z = 4.031, P < 1 × 10–4) (Fig. 2d, top row). OFC and ACC were statistically indistinguishable in this measure (z-test, z = 0.614, P = 0.539). However, responses to faces were usually not restricted to a single face image: 85.7% of face-responsive neurons in the amygdala responded to more than one face (80.2% of neurons in OFC and 59.4% of neurons in ACC exhibited the same property; Supplementary Fig. 5a). Only a minority of neurons responded to only a single face image (for example, Supplementary Fig. 5b). The proportion of neurons exhibiting a significant response to each face image did not differ across the face images for any brain area (chi-squared test, χ2 = 2.421, P > 0.9 in amygdala; χ2 = 3.930, P > 0.5 in OFC; χ2 = 2.964, P > 0.5 in ACC; Fig. 2e).
Although neurons often responded to more than one face image, an analysis using a linear decoder demonstrated that the population of amygdala neurons could be used to selectively discriminate which facial image was being viewed shortly after image onset (Fig. 2f and Methods)41. Decoding performance for face image identity was markedly superior in the amygdala relative to OFC or ACC (Fig. 2f, left), suggesting that on average the amygdala communicated more facial identity information per neuron than the prefrontal areas.
We next explored whether a neural representation of hierarchical rank was present in each brain area. A regression analysis was used to quantify the relationship between neural responses during fixation of the face images (100–400 ms after image onset) and the social position (1–8) of the viewed face, where position 1 corresponds to the most dominant monkey (M1). The regression coefficient βsoc characterized neuronal tuning to the hierarchical rank of face images. For the amygdala neuron depicted in Fig. 2a (left), βsoc was significantly less than 0 (P < 10–4), indicating that the neuron tended to fire more strongly to face images from dominant monkeys. Overall, 30.6% of amygdala neurons, corresponding to 36% of face-responsive neurons, exhibited statistically significant selectivity for hierarchical rank (Supplementary Table 2). Out of those 30.6% neurons, 63.6% responded more strongly to dominant face images and 36.4% more strongly to submissive face images (Supplementary Table 2). Neurons in OFC and ACC exhibited selectivity for hierarchical rank much less frequently (16.7% of OFC neurons, representing 23% of face-responsive OFC neurons, and 6.3% of ACC neurons, representing 9% of face-responsive ACC neurons).
We confirmed the presence of a representation of hierarchical rank across the population of amygdala cells by performing an out-of-sample test: we analyzed separately the neurons that responded more strongly to M1 (most dominant monkey) than to M8 (most submissive monkey) and those that responded more strongly to M8 than M1 (see Methods). We then assessed whether neural responses to faces from the remaining out-of-sample viewed monkeys (M2–M7) were correlated with hierarchical rank. For the amygdala, responses to monkey face images correlated significantly with the social position of viewed monkeys (P = 0.010 and P = 0.046 for dominant- and submissive-monkey-preferring neurons, respectively; Fig. 2g, left). These results indicate that neurons classified according to preferential responding to M1 or M8 exhibit correlated neural activity with hierarchical ranking when only considering responses to M2–M7. The relationship between neural activity and hierarchical rank is therefore not merely driven by responses to the most dominant (M1) and most submissive (M8) monkeys.
Unlike the amygdala, OFC and ACC did not provide a compelling representation of social hierarchy (Fig. 2g, middle and right). Moreover, only the amygdala exhibited regressions with oppositely signed slopes for dominant- and submissive-preferring neurons. We used a Fisher’s r to z transformation test to assess the statistical significance of the difference between the correlation coefficients in each brain area. This test revealed a statistically significant difference between the amygdala and ACC for dominant-preferring neurons and between the amygdala and OFC for submissive-preferring neurons (difference between correlations for dominant-preferring neurons: amygdala (r = –0.92) vs. OFC (r = –0.88), z = –0.26, P = 0.398; amygdala (r = –0.92) vs. ACC (r = 0.19), z = –2.18, P = 0.015; OFC (r = –0.88) vs. ACC (r = 0.19), z = –1.92; P = 0.028; for submissive-preferring neurons: amygdala (r = 0.82) vs. OFC (r = –0.32), z = 1.82; P = 0.034; amygdala (r = 0.82) vs. ACC (r = 0.87), z = 0.22, P = 0.413; OFC (r = –0.32) vs. ACC (r = 0.87), z = –2.04, P = 0.021). We also combined the data from dominant-preferring and submissive-preferring neurons by sign-flipping the data from the submissive-preferring neurons and then averaging these responses with those of dominant-preferring neurons. A correlation coefficient of these combined data was computed for each area. The amygdala was the only area significantly correlated with the social position of the viewed monkeys (r = –0.91, P = 0.013 for amygdala; r = –0.61, P = 0.20 for OFC; and r = –0.60, P = 0.21 for ACC).
Our electrophysiological recordings were obtained from the same parts of the amygdala, OFC and ACC shown previously to contain individual neurons that respond differentially to a conditioned stimulus (CS) depending upon its reward association19,20,41, a finding we also observed in this study (Fig. 2a–c, right). We examined the encoding of reward magnitudes associated with fractal images by using a regression analysis to estimate a coefficient (βfrac) quantifying the relationship between neural activity and the reward associated with fractals (see Methods). βfrac was significantly different from 0 in 38.9%, 25.8% and 39.2% of neurons in amygdala, OFC and ACC, respectively, with different neurons exhibiting positive or negative valence preference (Supplementary Table 2). The proportion of neurons responsive to one or more fractal images was not statistically distinguishable across the three brain structures (Fig. 2d, middle row, amygdala vs. OFC, z = 1.517, P = 0.129; amygdala vs. ACC, z = 0.855, P = 0.393; OFC vs. ACC, z = –0.723, P = 0.470; z-test for all comparisons), but the proportion of neurons responsive to one or more face and one or more fractal images was significantly greater in the amygdala than OFC and ACC, which were indistinguishable from each other (Fig. 2d, bottom row; z-test: amygdala vs. OFC, z = 3.126, P = 0.002, amygdala vs. ACC, z = 3.411, P < 1 × 10–3; OFC vs. ACC, z = 0.008, P = 0.994). A linear decoder analysis revealed that neuronal populations in all three brain areas could be used to decode fractals associated with different rewards beginning shortly after image onset, consistent with prior observations (Fig. 2f, right)41.
The same neuronal ensembles in the amygdala represent social hierarchy and reward value
We next hypothesized that neural representations of hierarchical rank and of the rewards associated with nonsocial (fractal) images might be encoded by overlapping neuronal ensembles. To test this hypothesis, we trained a linear decoder to distinguish between trials when fractals were associated with large or no reward. The training procedure sets the weight of each neuron as well as a global threshold for distinguishing between the two conditions used for training (Fig. 3a). The decoder was then tested on held-out trials of the same types, as well as on trials in which monkeys viewed two different selected monkey face images (Fig. 3b). This decoding analysis was performed in a 300-ms sliding window (see Methods). As expected, decoding performance was high in all three brain areas when testing occurred on held-out fractal trials (Fig. 3c–e), consistent with previously described neural representations of expected reward in all three brain areas41. When the decoder was trained to distinguish between trials with fractals associated with large or no reward and was tested to distinguish between trials in which two monkey faces were presented that differed greatly in hierarchical rank (M1 vs. M8), decoding performance in the amygdala was significantly above chance shortly after image onset and extending through the fixation interval (Fig. 3f). During the beginning of free viewing, however, decoding performance was significantly below chance, indicating that the opposite classification was made in this time interval, but that a relationship still existed between the encoding of fractals associated with different rewards and hierarchical rank. By contrast, when the same analysis was applied to neural responses to monkeys who had similar hierarchical rank (M4 and M5), decoding performance was barely different from chance (Fig. 3i). The same analysis performed on OFC and ACC neurons failed to classify hierarchical status when training the decoder on fractal image trials (Fig. 3g,h,j,k).
We used the analysis in Fig. 3f to define two time epochs: decoder above chance, which occupied 100–400 ms after image onset and occurred during fixation; and decoder below chance, which occupied 400–700 ms after image onset (0–300 ms after fixation point extinction). We then trained the decoder on large-reward and no-reward fractal image trials separately during each epoch and tested decoding for all pairs of face images during the corresponding time intervals, using the neuronal populations recorded from each brain area. In general, for the amygdala, decoding performance became increasingly different from chance with increasing distance between the social positions of two monkeys (Fig. 4a). Moreover, consistent with the analysis in which the decoder was tested on M1 vs. M8 (Fig. 3f), there was an opposite sign in decoding accuracy for the two time epochs. The same analysis applied to OFC and ACC demonstrated markedly less robust decoding of hierarchical status (Fig. 4b,c). These data indicate that the ability to decode the reward magnitude associated with an image does not necessarily result in the capacity to decode hierarchical rank, although it does so in the amygdala.
Decoder performance was quantitatively related to the social status index calculated from oculomotor behavior (see Fig. 1c). For each face image, we computed the average decoding performance for that image compared to each of the other faces when the decoder was trained to classify fractal images associated with large or no reward. In the amygdala, this average decoding performance was correlated with the computed social status index for that face image (P = 0.006 and P = 0.003, Fig. 4d and Fig. 4g, respectively). The regression slopes were opposite in the two time epochs, consistent with a change in sign in relationship between reward value and hierarchical status encoding at the ensemble level. A significant relationship between average decoding performance and social status index was not observed for OFC and ACC (P = 0.816 for OFC, Fig. 4e; P = 0.298 for ACC, Fig. 4f; P = 0.234 for ACC, Fig. 4i), except for during the second time epoch in OFC (P = 0.042, Fig. 4h). In addition, decoding performance between monkey face images was linearly correlated with the social distance between monkeys in the amygdala for the first and second time epochs, again with opposite signs for the two time epochs. (This analysis resampled the identities of the monkeys in the data points; Supplementary Fig. 6, r = 0.84, P = 0.018 and r = –0.92, P = 0.003.)
We considered two possible explanations for the intriguing change in sign of the relationship between the decoding of trials with different reward magnitudes and the decoding of hierarchical rank in the amygdala that occurred as a function of time (during and after required fixation). One possibility was that individual neurons may change their response preferences over time with respect to either hierarchical rank or expected reward magnitude. Alternatively, response preferences might be preserved, but instead different subensembles of neurons might contribute to the relationship between hierarchical rank and reward expectation during the two time intervals. The evidence supports this latter possibility.
First, the preferred response selectivity of neurons tended to be preserved across time intervals for both reward value and hierarchical rank preference. Each of the regression coefficients βfrac and βsoc, which quantify the relationship between firing rate and either the reward associated with fractals or the hierarchical status of face images, were correlated across the two time intervals on a cell-by-cell basis (r = 0.49, P < 1 × 10–6 for βfrac, Supplementary Fig. 7a, and r = 0.79, P < 1 × 10–15 for βsoc, Supplementary Fig. 7b; regression analyses). A change in sign in the relationship between decoding reward magnitude and hierarchical rank is therefore not likely to be accounted for by a change in the underlying response preferences of individual neurons.
Second, in the first time epoch (during fixation), for the dominant-preferring amygdala neurons (βsoc < 0), we observed a significant correlation between the two regression coefficients βfrac and βsoc, such that neurons that fired more for larger expected rewards fired more for dominant face images (P = 0.032, r = –0.21). This was not observed in OFC and ACC for the subpopulations of neurons exhibiting a weak correlation with rank (Fig. 2g) (P = 0.194, r = 0.17 for dominant-preferring neurons in OFC and P = 0.337, r = 0.11 for submissive-preferring neurons in ACC, see Supplementary Fig. 8a–d). Consistent with this, dominant-preferring amygdala neurons responded significantly more to the large-reward fractal than to the fractal predicting no reward (P = 0.045, paired t-test, Supplementary Fig. 9a), unlike submissive-preferring amygdala neurons (P = 0.202, paired t-test in all cases, Supplementary Fig. 9b) or the subpopulations of OFC and ACC neurons that exhibited a weak correlation with hierarchical rank (Fig. 2g) (P = 0.226 for OFC and P = 0.452 for ACC, paired t-test, Supplementary Fig. 9c,d).
Finally, in the second time epoch (after the fixation requirement), a significant relationship was observed between βfrac and βsoc when considering all amygdala neurons (r = 0.15, P = 0.039, Supplementary Fig. 10a). This relationship seemed to be driven predominantly by neurons responding most strongly to submissive monkeys (r = 0.20, P = 0.066, Supplementary Fig. 10a) as opposed to neurons responding most strongly to dominant monkeys (r = 0.04, P = 0.694, Supplementary Fig. 10a), which were the subensemble of neurons correlated with reward selectivity during the first time epoch (see above). Furthermore, neurons that responded more strongly to M8 than M1 (submissive-preferring neurons) during the second time epoch responded significantly more strongly to the large-reward fractal than to the no-reward fractal (P = 0.030, paired t-test, Supplementary Fig. 10c), a relationship not observed for the dominant-preferring neurons (P = 0.434, paired t-test, Supplementary Fig. 10b). Overall, therefore, the change in sign in decoding performance in the amygdala for hierarchical rank during the second compared to the first time epoch appears to be accounted for by a change in the relative contribution of dominant- and submissive-preferring subensembles of neurons to decoding performance in the two time epochs. These results can also be observed at a qualitative level by examining average neural responses to dominant and submissive face images separately for populations of neurons that prefer large or no reward (Supplementary Fig. 11).
We considered the possibility that the differential engagement of subpopulations of neurons during the two time epochs was related to differences in oculomotor behavior that could emerge as a result of the initiation of a free viewing interval. However, we did not observe any differences in oculomotor metrics that were related to social hierarchy (Supplementary Fig. 12) or reward amount of the fractal images. Even during the time interval extending from 700–1,000 ms after image onset, significant differences in oculomotor behavior that were related to hierarchical rank were not observed (Supplementary Fig. 13). The time window used to compute the social index, where oculomotor differences emerged, was at the very end of the free viewing epoch, more than 1,000 ms after image onset. Despite the fact that the observed patterns of neural activity could not be accounted for by oculomotor behavior, covert changes in cognitive processes, such as a desire to shift gaze or attention depending upon the hierarchical rank of a viewed face, may occur upon fixation point offset that could cause differential engagement of amygdala neuronal subensembles.
Discussion
This study took advantage of the fact that ten monkeys had lived together in the same social group for many years, enabling us to investigate the neurophysiological encoding of social hierarchy. Human observers and a social status index computed from measures of monkeys’ oculomotor behavior as they viewed face images of their social cohort indexed the social hierarchy within this group in a consistent manner. Electrophysiological data revealed that the primate amygdala provided a neural representation of the hierarchical rank of individuals. As in prior studies, neurons in the amygdala also represented the reward magnitudes associated with different nonsocial (fractal) images. The representation of hierarchical rank was apparent in the same neuronal ensemble that represent rewards associated with nonsocial stimuli. Training a linear decoder to discriminate between trials in which different nonsocial stimuli predict large or no reward permitted decoding of the hierarchical relationship between individuals in the monkeys’ social group. These data provide strong evidence that the same neuronal ensembles that encode expected reward magnitudes may mediate aspects of social behavior by representing a complex social variable, hierarchical rank42. The data therefore argue against strong versions of the social brain hypothesis by demonstrating that, at least for the encoding of hierarchical rank, the same neuronal substrate in the amygdala appears to process social and nonsocial information.
Our results indicate that neuronal ensembles that represent reward magnitudes associated with nonsocial stimuli may also be used to represent the hierarchical ranks of individuals. Stimuli that depict individuals with known hierarchical rank convey motivational meaning to a subject, just as reward-predictive stimuli convey motivational meaning. Both social and nonsocial stimuli can influence subsequent decisions, actions, and emotional responses more broadly. However, two lines of evidence indicate that representations of the reward magnitudes associated with nonsocial stimuli do not inherently represent hierarchical rank in all brain structures. First, the OFC and ACC both represent expected reward magnitudes strongly, but neither structure provided a compelling representation of hierarchical rank; training a linear decoder to discriminate between large and no reward fractal image trials did not allow us to decode hierarchical rank in those structures (Figs. 2–4). Second, we observed that the relationship between representations of reward magnitude and hierarchical rank in the amygdala changed as a function of time during a trial (Figs. 3 and 4). This observation argues strongly that the results cannot be easily accounted for by neural signals that merely encode variables such as arousal, attention, valuation or other related processes. It is very unlikely, for example, that an arousing and attention-grabbing alpha monkey becomes not arousing or attention-grabbing within a few hundred milliseconds, which would be required for signals encoding arousal or attention to account for our data. Instead, cell-by-cell regression analyses suggested that separate populations of amygdala neurons may be engaged at different times during a trial to represent hierarchical rank, and these subpopulations have differential relationships with the encoding of expected reward magnitudes (Supplementary Figs. 7–10).
Our data are also unlikely to be accounted for by a low-level visual feature of face images that somehow conveys hierarchical rank. Training a decoder on neural responses to fractal images that predict different reward amounts should not be expected to allow decoding of hierarchical rank based on a low-level visual feature. In short, it is difficult to imagine that a particular sensory feature of face images that conveys hierarchical rank information has a consistent relationship with reward magnitudes associated with fractal images. However, the shared encoding in the amygdala of hierarchical rank and the rewards associated with nonsocial stimuli could reflect the provision of a common currency for stimuli of many different types that is present transiently in the amygdala (as the representation of social rank was not sustained across the entire trial, unlike reward value; Fig. 3c,f)43, but further experiments are needed. To wit, the neuronal ensembles we have characterized may also represent other social variables, such as body gestures or complex facial expressions that convey emotional and motivational meaning, and it is unknown whether the representations of these social variables are related to encoding of the reward values of nonsocial stimuli. It remains possible that some aspects of primate social behavior share the same neuronal encoding as nonsocial processes, with other aspects of social behavior being mediated by different neural representations42,44.
Monkeys almost certainly learn the hierarchical rank of other group members through experience, so the acquisition of a neural representation of hierarchical rank may occur in a similar manner as when a subject learns the relationship between nonsocial stimuli and rewards through reinforcement learning45. Of course, learning about hierarchical rank may also be facilitated through observational learning46. The sharing of a neuronal substrate for learning about nonsocial rewards and about social hierarchy information has mechanistic implications for understanding the pathophysiology and potential treatments for some patients with psychiatric disorders. For example, patients with autism spectrum disorder or schizophrenia often exhibit deficits in social interactions, sometimes struggling to appropriately register social situations or cues or to respond to such situations adaptively47,48. Some of these patients may also possess deficits in learning about the significance (for example, reward value) of nonsocial stimuli49. Indeed, applied behavior analysis treatments—based on reinforcing correct behavior with different types of reward—have been shown to benefit many patients with autism spectrum disorder50, suggesting that focused behavioral manipulations may compensate for deficits in learning mechanisms in these patients. However, the neural underpinnings of deficits in social processing that also requires learning has remained unclear, in large part because we have understood relatively little about how the brain represents and utilizes social information. The discovery of neural representations of hierarchical rank in the amygdala observed in the same neural ensembles that represent the rewards associated with nonsocial stimuli may thereby provide a significant step toward describing the neural networks critical for understanding psychiatric pathology and treatment.
Methods
Animals and surgical procedures
All experiment procedures were in accordance with the guidelines of the National Institutes of Health guide for the care and use of laboratory animals and the Animal Care and Use Committees at New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University. Two adult male rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) weighing 9.6 kg and 10.2 kg (monkey R and monkey F) underwent surgical sessions under isoflurane general anesthesia and using aseptic techniques to implant a plastic head post and an oval recording chamber positioned over a craniotomy that provided access to the right amygdala and prefrontal cortex. Analgesics and antibiotics were administered during recovery from surgery. The Brainsight 2 system (Rogue Research) was used in combination with presurgery magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to localize the brain structures and determine coordinates of chamber placement. A second MRI was performed after surgery to verify correct placement of the recording chamber and to determine electrode coordinate locations using the Brainsight 2 software for recording from the amygdala, orbitofrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex. Another MRI was performed on the monkeys at the end of the experimental sessions to validate localization of our recoding sites.
These experiments involved electrophysiological recordings in two monkeys each of whom lived in the same social group of ten male monkeys for more than 5 years. In addition, no monkeys entered or exited this stable social group of ten monkeys. Monkeys were housed either individually or, when possible, in pairs. In the present study, monkey F was paired with M5 and Monkey R was occasionally paired with M3. Human observers have noted a consistent hierarchy within the group of ten monkeys, with the same monkeys being viewed as most dominant or submissive. Their room was equipped with mirrors on the wall as well as Plexiglas panels dividing the different cages to allow frequent visual contact between all members of the colony. Play cages were adjacent to all apartment cages in the room, and every monkey had regular access to a play cage.
Experimental procedures
The experimental sessions were conducted in a darkened, sound-attenuated and RF-shielded room. Throughout the session, the monkeys were seated in a primate chair with their head restrained. They viewed a 17-inch, 1,024 × 800 pixel CRT screen, refresh rate 100 Hz, placed 57 cm from their eyes. Eye movements were recorded at 1,000 Hz using an optometric system: Eyelink I system (SR Research). To measure licking behavior, a reward delivery spout was placed few millimeters in front of monkeys’ mouths. Receipt of liquid reward required extrusion of the tongue to the delivery spout or the liquid reward would drop to the floor. Licking behavior was measured by using an infrared laser beam set between the monkey lips and the reward delivery spout. The interruption of this laser beam thereby demarcated anticipatory and consummatory approach behaviors to obtain reward.
Visual stimuli and the behavioral task were under the control of Expo software running on a dedicated Apple computer. Neuronal data, eye movements and licking behavior were stored using the Plexon Omniplex system (Plexon, Inc.). Synchronization between the Expo and Plexon system was achieved by timestamps sent from Expo during each trial to the Omniplex system. Data collection and analysis were not performed blind to the conditions of the experiments. However, all well-isolated neurons were kept, and we did not choose the type of neurons we recorded during data acquisition on the basis of their selectivity to the task events.
Behavioral task
Animals performed a trace-conditioning task where a conditioned stimulus (CS) predicts delivery of an unconditioned stimulus (US); the task required fixation, and actual reward receipt depended upon licking behavior. The two monkeys used in this study had previously been trained on a task using CS and US presentations, but the prior experience did not involve the presentation of social stimuli of any kind. The two monkeys experienced only two sessions on the specific task described below before recording sessions commenced.
In the present experiments, monkeys performed a trace conditioning task in which either the presentation of a fractal image or a monkey face image predicted the delivery of reward. Fractal image CS and monkey face image CS trials were presented in separate blocks of trials. Monkeys initiated a trial by centering gaze on a fixation point (FP) at the center of the screen. The radius of the fixation window was 5 degrees. The average fixation position was not different between the fractal and social images, indicating that visual scanning of the images did not differ for the fractal vs. face images during fixation (Kruskal–Wallis test, P > 0.05). Following 0.4 s of fixation, we presented an image (CS) under the FP; images were 15 degrees square. Monkeys were required to maintain fixation for an additional 0.4 s before FP disappearance. The CS remained on the screen for an additional 1 s, providing a free viewing epoch. After image extinction, a 0.75-s delay ensued before delivery of the unconditioned stimulus (US). The inter-trial interval (ITI) was 1 s for all trial types. Failure to engage or maintain fixation for the entire 0.8 s epoch led to the presentation of a black screen for a 1,000 ms timeout, followed by the ITI and then trial repetition. All trials were randomly interleaved within a block.
The CSs were either a fractal or social image. Three different fractal images were presented to the viewer monkeys, one associated with two drops of liquid reward, one with one drop of reward, and one with no reward. Successful fixation therefore resulted in reward delivery for two of the fractals. Social images were pictures of the faces of eight ‘viewed’ rhesus monkeys (M1 to M8) who were all members of the same group of ten primates (the eight viewed monkeys and the two viewer monkeys who were the subject of electrophysiological recordings in this study) housed in the same room for more than 5 years. The position of the FP was between the superior lip and the nose of images. Face images were selected to be devoid of emotional expressions, such as lip smacking, aggressive open mouth, anxious bared-teeth grins or ear position. The gaze of the eyes of the face images was not directly toward the viewer monkeys. Successful fixation during trials in which social images were used as CSs resulted in one drop of reward. Note that reward delivery was not contingent on approach behavior to the reward tube, but that failure to approach the reward tube (for example, with licking) resulted in the reward falling to the floor. Each experiment was composed of a fractal block, followed by a social block, followed by a fractal block, with 5–20 trials per condition per block.
Electrophysiological methods
The activity of single neurons was recorded extracellularly using U- and V-probes (Plexon, Inc.) of 24 channels in amygdala and 16 channels each in OFC and ACC. All the probes had 100 µm spacing between each contact channel. The three probes were lowered simultaneously through stainless steel guide tubes by means of a motorized multi-electrode drive (NAN Instruments). Analog extracellular signals were amplified, bandpass filtered (250–8,000 Hz) and digitized (40,000 Hz) using the Plexon Omniplex system (Plexon, Inc.). Single units were isolated offline using the Plexon offline sorter 3.3 based on the three principal components of waveforms. Only well-isolated single cells with an adequate refractory period (1.5 ms) were kept. Cross-correlogram and selectivity analysis were performed through the different units to reject duplicate cells across contingent channels. 196 neurons were recorded in the basolateral amygdala (monkey F: 151 cells; monkey R: 45 cells), 134 in OFC (area 13 m and 13 l; monkey F: 78 cells; monkey R: 56 cells) and 187 in ACC (monkey F: 117 cells; monkey R: 70 cells; 61%, 21% and 18% of ACC neurons were recorded in, respectively, the ventral bank of ACC, area 24c; the dorsal bank of ACC; and the ACC gyrus, area 32). Different types of neural modulation by social experiences have been previously reported in these different parts of ACC34, but we did not observe difference between these substructures. Recording site reconstruction is shown in Supplementary Fig. 4.
Behavioral analysis
Scoring of social hierarchy by human observer
A human observer scored the social status of each monkey of the colony based on the method described by Zumpe and Michael38, which has successfully been applied in several studies23. Aggressive and submissive agonistic behaviors were recorded during a dozen series of at least 5- to 15-min observations, each of which were preceded by 5 min of habituation. These observations occurred before all the recording sessions with the two monkeys. Observation sessions were conducted either when two monkeys were in nearby cages such that they could interact socially or when two monkeys were placed in chairs positioned to face each other. We scored behaviors that included escaping, lip smacking, chasing and aggressive behaviors such as an open mouth or the shaking or slapping of a cage wall adjacent to the other monkey. A submissive behavior was recorded as a win for the other monkey. When two monkeys were seated in primate chairs facing each other, we also conducted a food competition test. A piece of food was placed two to four consecutive times on a small plate between the two monkeys. Each time one of the monkeys grabbed the food, he was scored as the winner51,52. Other agonistic behaviors (described above) were also scored during this test. If an aggressive behavior by one monkey induced a submissive behavior by another monkey, only the aggressive behavior was scored. Because grooming and mounting have no necessary relationships with dominance53, these behaviors were not classified as agonistic (Table 1 and Supplementary Table 1).
Analysis of behavior during electrophysiology experiments
All data analysis programs were written in Matlab (MathWorks Inc., Natick, MA) and used its statistical toolbox. Since preliminary analyses did not reveal substantial differences between the patterns of neuronal activity, the oculomotor behavior and the valuation of the social hierarchy between the two monkeys, we conducted all subsequent analyses on data pooled from all recording sessions in the two viewer monkeys.
The assessment of social hierarchy when monkeys view face images
A social status index was created that characterized how the two experimental monkeys assessed the social status of the eight monkeys whose faces they viewed. This index was computed using the oculomotor behavior of the two recorded (‘viewer’) monkeys. The index was constructed from four measures, which were weighted equally: (1) trial completion rate for each viewed face image (successful completion of fixation); (2) the proportion of time a viewer monkey spends looking at the image of a monkey’s face during the last one-third of the free viewing interval; (3) the proportion of errors that are due to breaking fixation during viewing of a monkey face, as opposed to breaking fixation before image presentation or not engaging in fixation at all; and (4) the proportion of time during the last one-third of the free viewing interval that the monkey views the eyes of a face image divided by the time the subject spends looking at other parts of the same image. The social status index was computed as
where A, B, C and D are measures 1, 2, 3 and 4 described above.
In general, these measures of social status exploit the fact that monkeys tend to prefer viewing pictures of dominant monkeys40,54,55 (measures 1 and 2), but that viewing of a dominant monkey face can be more arousing, leading to more frequent reflexive broken fixations (measure 3). These broken fixations could reflect arousal or other motivated behaviors (for example, gaze shifting) related to the social status of a viewed face. In support of this notion, measure 3 is strongly anticorrelated with propensity to re-engage fixation on the next trial after this type of error (r = –0.90, P = 0.002, Pearson’s linear correlation test (two-sided)), suggesting that these broken fixations may not be volitional and instead may simply be automatic responses due to arousal. Finally, we employ eye gaze directed toward the eyes as a measure because such gaze is a threat in the primate world, and therefore there is a tendency not to look at the eyes of a dominant monkey56.
Analysis of oculomotor metrics
We also analyzed oculomotor metrics that included the number of saccades or microsaccades and the amplitudes and orientations of these saccades during two time epochs: 100–400 ms after CS onset (when fixation was required) and 400–700 ms after CS onset (the first 300 ms of the free viewing epoch). Oculomotor parameters were examined for each of the eight viewed monkey face images to determine whether they varied as a function of the viewed monkey identity.
Statistical methods
No statistical methods were used to predetermine sample sizes, but our sample sizes are similar to those reported in previous publications (for example, ref. 41). Data distribution was assumed to be normal, but this was not formally tested for all the analyses. The decoder does not assume any normality in the data distributions. Behavioral analyses were carried out using the Kruskal–Wallis test for main and interaction effects between groups and post hoc comparisons (Dunn’s multiple comparison test) or Wilcoxon rank sum test, when appropriate. We used two-sided paired t-tests and Fisher’s r to z transformation test to investigate statistical neural difference between conditions, and Pearson’s linear correlation test (two-sided) to compute linear correlation coefficients (see below).
Analysis of neurophysiological data
For all analyses described below, data were combined across monkeys because all key features of the dataset were statistically indistinguishable between monkeys. In general, we required at least 5 trials per condition in order to consider a neuron for any analysis described below.
Single-neuron analysis
The analysis of neural data largely focused on a time epoch extending from 100–400 ms after CS onset or a time epoch spanning 400–700 ms after CS onset. The first time epoch was selected because of the known response latency of neurons in amygdala, OFC and ACC to visual stimuli of approximately 100 ms and because the fixation requirement terminated 400 ms after CS onset. The second time epoch was of the same length and corresponded to the first 300 ms of the free viewing epoch.
Normalization of neural activity
For some analyses, we normalized neural activity before averaging across neurons. In this case, for each session, the firing rate (FR) for different conditions was normalized with respect to baseline activity measure during the second half of the inter-trial interval (ITI), a time interval chosen because fixation point presentation can induce a visual response and a signal related to state value in the amygdala57:
where FR n represent the normalized FR for one condition in one epoch, FR i is the absolute FR for that condition in the same epoch, and μ and s.d. are, respectively, the mean and s.d. of the spike count across trials during the baseline interval.
Linear regression analysis quantifying reward value and social hierarchy tuning
Individual cells were characterized according to their tuning to reward value and social hierarchy in the following way. To quantify the tuning to the reward predicted by the fractals, the firing rate FR of each neuron during a time interval of interest was fitted to the value of the fractals V (the amount of reward predicted by a given fractal) in accordance to the linear regression:
Notice that we obtain one regression coefficient βfrac per cell (and per considered time interval).
Analogously, we quantified neural tuning to social hierarchy by fitting the firing rate FR of each neuron with the linear regression
where R indicates the rank of a given monkey face image in the social hierarchy as derived from the social status index (see above).
Correlations between regression coefficients (either of the same β computed in different time epochs or between βfrac and βsoc in the same time epoch) quantify the consistency of the neural tuning (across time epochs or between nonsocial and social value, respectively). This correlation was calculated by computing the Pearson’s correlation coefficient r between βfrac and βsoc for the whole population of recorded cells (or for subpopulations of cells, as indicated in the text).
Population decoding
We used a standard linear classifier for the population decoding (see, for example, ref. 41). The decoding algorithm was based on a population decoder trained on pseudo-simultaneous population response vectors58. The components of these vectors corresponded to the spike counts of the recorded neurons in specific time bins computed in the following way. The activity of each neuron in every trial was aligned to CS onset, the event that in the analysis defines time zero. Within each trial we then computed the spike count over time bins. All analyses were then carried out independently in every time bin as explained below. For every neuron and every time bin, we z-scored the distribution of spike counts across all trials and all conditions. The mean and s.d. used were always computed on the training data (see below). Given a task condition c (for instance, the fractal associated with large reward) and a time bin t (for instance, between 100 and 400 ms after CS presentation), we generated pseudo-simultaneous population response vectors by sampling, for every neuron i, the z-scored spike count in a randomly selected trial in condition c, which we indicate by nc i (t). This procedure resulted in the single-trial population response vector nc(t) = (nc1(t), nc2(t),…, nc N (t)), where N is the number of recorded neurons in the area under consideration.
Training and testing of the population decoder
The decoder analysis comprises a training phase, for which (unless otherwise stated) we used 75% of the trials, and a testing (or evaluation) phase done over the 25% of trials that were held out from training. Training and testing were repeated 1,000 times over different random partitions of the trials into training and test trials. We then report the mean performance and the associated confidence interval obtained from the resulting empirical distribution of decoding accuracy.
We discarded neurons with less than five repetitions per condition in the training stage of the decoding analysis. For standard decoding (training and testing on same type of stimuli) the two conditions tested could be either two fractal images (allowing the training of three binary classifiers, discriminating between large vs. no reward, medium vs. no reward, or large vs. medium reward, and combined in a three-way classifier) or two social images (resulting in 56 binary classifiers combined in an eight-way classifier). For some analyses, we trained the decoder to discriminate fractals associated with large vs. no reward and tested the decoder’s ability to discriminate between any two monkey face images.
We performed the decoding analyses using an equal number of neurons in the three brain areas to reject a potential confound in the results due to differences in the number of neurons in the population of each area (Fig. 2). This was accomplished by randomly subsampling the recorded populations such that decoding was performed on 110 cells in each structure when the training procedure was performed on social images or 131 cells when the training occurred on fractal images; the number of neurons was equal to the number of OFC neurons passing our criterion for inclusion (see Fig. 2f). The random subsampling meant that we randomly rejected a new set of excess amygdala and ACC neurons at each iteration of the decoder. For all decoding analyses, similar results were obtained if we did not equate the number of neurons from each brain area and instead included all neurons.
When we examined decoding performance as a function of time across entire trials, we employed time bins of 300 ms stepped in 100-ms increments across the trial, with training and testing performed on each 300-ms time bin. We also performed decoding analyses focused on two time windows, 100–400 ms after CS onset (during fixation) and 400–700 ms after CS onset (the first 300 ms of free viewing) (see below). For these analyses, we used six 50-ms bins in each of the two 300-ms-long epochs. We then located the peak of decoding within these two 300-ms windows (the 50-ms epoch with decoding performance most different from chance), and this peak value is plotted in Fig. 4. In Fig. 4a–c, although all paired combinations of monkey face images have been tested (56 pairs), we present only half of the comparisons as the other half of comparisons have the same results with an opposite sign; for example, the value for the comparison M1 vs. M8 = –(M8 vs. M1).
Justification of the neural windows selection (100–400 ms and 400–700 ms after image onset)
First, we selected the onset of the first window as 100 ms after image onset due to the visual response latencies that have been observed in these brain areas41. This effect can be seen in Fig. 2f, where the decoding performance starts to increase approximately 100 ms after image presentation. The first time window is merely the remaining time in the fixation interval, which ends 400 ms after image onset. The second time window was set to 400–700 ms for several reasons: (1) to mirror the length of the first window; (2) to be able to analyze neural data in an interval of the free viewing epoch where we did not observe differences in oculomotor behavior as a function of the viewed monkey face images (the differences in oculomotor behavior occur later, during the last third of the free viewing epoch), thus avoiding a contribution of explicit concurrent behavioral differences in our interpretation of the neural response properties; and (3) because we observed a flip in decoding performance around FP extinction during the decoding analysis in which we trained on fractal images differing in reward amount and tested the decoder on monkey face images that differed substantially in social rank (Fig. 3f,i and Fig. 4a). This last analysis found that decoding different from chance occurred in a distinctive manner in each of these time windows, but that in later time intervals during free viewing, decoding performance was largely not different from chance.
Finally, as is evident in Fig. 2f, left, the peak of decoding in the three structures occurred between 300 and 700 ms after image onset (350, 500 and 650 ms in AMY, OFC and ACC respectively). This makes us confident that most of the neural signals of interest occur in the 100–700 ms interval. Indeed, no clear modulation happens later in the trial (Fig. 3).
Statistical significance and estimate of confidence intervals
As described above, on every iteration of the training and testing procedure, we partitioned the trials into training and testing sets by random sampling without replacement. The average decoding performance, its statistical significance and confidence intervals were estimated by repeating the partitioning procedure 1,000 times59 The confidence intervals shown throughout the population analyses in this work correspond to the 95th percentiles of the distributions obtained by repeated partitioning.
Statistical methods summary for figures presenting neural data
Fig. 2a–c shows PSTHs for individual cells. For Fig. 2d,e, we computed the percentage of neurons that had a statistically significant change in firing rate during the CS (fractal or face image) presentation during the time epoch spanning 100 to 400 ms after CS appearance (response significantly different from the ITI, P < 0. 05, paired t-test). The percentage of neurons depicted in Fig. 2d corresponds to the percentage of neurons that exhibited a significant response to at least one of the eight viewed monkeys (‘Monkey’), at least one of the fractals (‘Fractal’) or at least one of the monkeys and at least one of the fractals (‘Both’). Fig. 2f depicts decoding performance when using a linear decoder (see above). All neurons are included in this analysis (with at least 5 trials of data per condition). We then equalized the number of neurons in the three areas by subsampling. In Fig. 2g, neurons were categorized as preferring dominant or submissive monkey face images if average response to M1 was either at least 1 Hz greater in response to M1 compared to M8 (dominant-preferring) or to M8 compared to M1 (submissive-preferring). Neural responses to M2–M7 during the time epoch 100–400 ms after CS onset were then normalized and averaged across all dominant- or submissive-preferring neurons. A correlation analysis was then performed on the average normalized responses to M2–M7.
Fig. 3 presents data from a linear decoder used to analyze all neurons in our dataset (see above).
Fig. 4a–c presents data from a linear decoder used to analyze all neurons in our dataset (see above). In Fig. 4d–i, correlation analyses are performed to determine whether there is a relationship for each viewed monkey face image between its social index score (see behavioral analysis methods) and the average decoding performance for distinguishing that face image from each of the other seven face images. This analysis is performed in two different time epochs: 100–400 ms after CS onset (Fig. 4d–f) and 400–700 ms after CS onset (Fig. 4g–i), with the peak decoding performance in a 50-ms bin presented (see above methods description for the decoding analyses). All neurons are included in the analysis.
Supplementary Fig. 5 depicts example PSTHs constructed from the response of two different individual neurons.
Supplementary Fig. 6 depicts a correlation analysis that characterizes the relationship between the difference in social rank of any two face images and the average decoding performance for distinguishing between those face images, an analysis that captures how decoding performance depends upon social ‘distance’.
In Supplementary Fig. 7, we selected neurons with β coefficients significantly different from 0 in either of the two time epochs (100–400 ms or 400–700 ms after CS onset) when analyzing trials with fractals (Supplementary Fig. 7a) or face images (Supplementary Fig. 7b) (P < 0.05 using the linear regression analysis for single cells described above). We then used a correlation analysis to characterize the relationship between β coefficients for the same type of image presented (fractal or face image) in the two time epochs.
In Supplementary Fig. 8, we categorized neurons as preferring dominant or submissive neurons by using the sign of the β coefficient from the linear regression analysis applied to data from the first time epoch, 100–400 ms after CS onset (see above). We did not impose a statistical threshold as an inclusion criterion in this analysis. We then asked whether β coefficients for fractal images and face images from each time epoch were correlated with each other.
In Supplementary Fig. 9, for the groups of neurons identified in Fig. 2g (low- or high-rank-preferring neurons), we calculated the average firing rate during fractal image presentation in the first analysis epoch (100–400 ms after CS onset).
In Supplementary Fig. 10a, we categorized neurons as preferring dominant or submissive neurons by using the sign of the β coefficient from the linear regression analysis for neural activity from the second time epoch, 400–700 ms after CS onset (see above). We did not impose a statistical threshold as an inclusion criterion in this analysis. We then asked whether β coefficients for fractal images and face images from each time epoch were correlated with each other. Supplementary Fig. 10b,c shows the average normalized activity during fractal image presentation in the second analysis epoch (400–700 ms) for neurons that prefer dominant or submissive monkey face images (as in Fig. 2g).
In Supplementary Fig. 11, to compute the population PSTHs during the fractal and social trials, we partitioned neurons into two groups based on the preference of each neuron for large- or no-reward fractal images (unpaired t-test, P < 0.05) during the first epoch and second epoch.
Supplementary Table 2 represents the number and percentage of neurons with a significant regression factor (P < 0.05) for social and fractal images in each of the two analyzed time epochs.
Life Sciences Reporting Summary
Further information on experimental design is available in the Life Sciences Reporting Summary.
Data availability
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Code availability
No custom code has been used. Analysis have been performed by using Matlab statistical toolboxes. The analysis code employed is available upon reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
We thank R. Adolphs, E. Issa and members of the Salzman lab for critical comments on this work and the manuscript. This work was supported by the Fyssen Foundation, Philippe Foundation (J.M), the Simons Foundation and National Institutes of Health grant R01 MH082017 (C.D.S.).
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J.M. and C.D.S. designed the study; J.M. performed the experiments; J.M., M.R. and C.D.S. designed analyses; J.M. and M.R. performed analyses; J.M., M.R. and C.D.S. wrote the manuscript.
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Integrated supplementary information
Supplementary Figure 1 Anticipatory licking is correlated with reward magnitude.
Over the sessions (n=17), the time spent licking during the first 100ms of the trace epoch is plotted for fractals associated with large, low and no reward. Kruskal-Wallis test, Chi-sq(2,48)=25.71, p < 1e-05; Dunn’s post-hoc, Large vs. No Rew., p < 1e-04; Medium vs. No Rew., p = 0.006). Red diamonds represent mean, white lines represent median, blue bars and whiskers represent 75th and 85th percentiles respectively, blue circles represent data points beyond the whiskers limits.
Supplementary Figure 2 Behavioral measures used to compute the social status index.
A. Trial completion rate; B. The proportion of the time spent viewing the image during the last 333 ms of the free viewing interval; C. The proportion of errors due to fixation break during image presentation; D. The time in which gaze was centered within 3.5 degrees of the center of one of the eyes relative to the time spent viewing other parts of the monkey face during the last 333 ms of the free viewing interval. Red diamonds represent mean, white lines represent median, blue bars and whiskers represent 75th and 85th percentiles respectively, blue circles represent data points beyond the whiskers limits. (n=17 sessions for each box plot; panel B, M5, n = 16 since monkey F made no error for this image during session #15).
Supplementary Figure 3 Social Index from behavioral measures of hierarchical assessment observed during control (unknown monkeys) and main (known monkeys) sessions.
A. Social Index score of 2 dominant (left bar) and 2 submissive (right bar) unknown monkeys for the viewer monkey (monkey F). No statistical difference between the 2 groups (z=0.4504, p=0.3262, one-tailed Wilcoxon rank sum test). B. Social Index score of 2 dominant (M1 and M2, left bar) and 2 submissive (M7 and M8, right bar) monkeys. These viewed monkeys are members of the same group as the viewer monkey. The 2 groups are statistically different (z=1.8853, p=0.0297, one-tailed Wilcoxon rank sum test). Three equivalent sessions are included for both analyses (n=24 for each box plot, 2 viewed monkeys*4 behavioral measures*3 sessions). Red diamonds represent mean, white lines represent median, blue bars and whiskers represent 75th and 85th percentiles respectively, blue circles represent data points beyond the whiskers limits.
Supplementary Figure 4 Recording locations.
The location of each neuron is indicated by a '+' on the corresponding coronal slice. Note that a location can contain more than one neuron as several can be recorded on the same channel. Anterior-posterior coordinate of each slice is specified relative to the inter-aural (IA) plane. Diagrams were constructed from anatomical MRIs of each monkey. From left to right: Amygdala, slices 1 and 2 for monkey R and F; ACC, slices 3 and 4 from monkey R, slices 3, 4 and 5 for monkey F; OFC, slices 5 and 6 from monkey R, slices 6 and 7 for monkey F.
Supplementary Figure 5 Amygdala neurons encode information about facial identity.
A. Single cell PSTH showing a neuron that responded to multiple faces. B. Single cell PSTH showing selectivity for M4 only.
Supplementary Figure 6 Decoding performance is correlated with social distance.
Average decoding performance in the amygdala when training on fractal images and testing on monkey face images plotted as a function of social distance between the different monkeys in the 1st (A) and 2nd time epochs (B). C. Social distance chart used to compute the social distance between each pair of monkeys ranging from 7 (maximal distance, M1 vs. M8) to 1 (minimal distance M4 vs. M5 or M4 vs. M3, etc). Pearson’s correlation coefficient (two-sided), 1st epoch, r = 0.84, p=0.018; 2nd epoch, r = -0.92, p = 0.003.
Supplementary Figure 7 Correlation between the regression coefficients across the two epochs used for neural analysis.
A represents the correlation of βfrac, B, represents the correlation of βsoc. Neurons included in these analyses are the ones with a significant (p<0.05) regression factor (β) in either of the 2 intervals. Pearson’s correlation coefficient (two-sided), panel A, n = 94 neurons, r = 0.49, p < 1e-06; panel B, n = 70 neurons r = 0.79, p < 1e-15.
Supplementary Figure 8 Correlation between the two regression coefficients βfrac and βsoc in amygdala, OFC and ACC during the fixation interval (100–400 ms after image onset).
The correlation coefficients represent the populations that exhibited a correlation with social status ranking (see Fig. 2G; these identified populations were dominant preferring neurons in amygdala (A) and OFC (C) and submissive preferring neurons in amygdala (B) and ACC (D)). Pearson’s correlation coefficient (two-sided): panel A, r = -0.213, p=0.032, n = 102 neurons; B, r = 0.005, p = 0.969, n = 78; C, r = 0.166, p = 0.194, n = 63; D, r = 0.110, p = 0.337, n = 78. Color blue represents the dominant preferring neurons while color red represents the submissive preferring neurons.
Supplementary Figure 9 The relationship between the encoding of reward value and social status in the amygdala.
A-D. Mean normalized firing plotted for activity during 100 – 400 ms after CS onset for fractal images associated with large, medium and no reward in neuronal populations that exhibited a correlation with social status ranking (see Fig. 2G; these identified populations were dominant preferring neurons in amygdala (A, n= 112 neurons) and OFC (C, n= 79) and submissive preferring neurons in amygdala (B, n= 83 and ACC (D, n= 87). For neurons in the amygdala that responded most strongly to dominant monkey face images (A), the response is significantly stronger (Two-sided paired t-test, t(11) = 2.0306, p = 0.045) to fractals associated with large rewards than to other fractals associated with no reward (Panel B, t(82)=1.2856, p = 0.202; panel C, t(78)=-1.2214, p = 0.226; panel D, t(86)=0.7562, p = 0.452). Red diamonds represent mean, white lines represent median, blue bars and whiskers represent 75th and 98th percentiles respectively, blue dots represent data points beyond the whiskers limits, black dots represent neurons within the 98th percentiles interval.
Supplementary Figure 10 The relationship between the encoding of reward value and social status in the amygdala during the first 300 ms of free viewing epoch (400–700 ms after image onset).
A. Correlation between the two regression coefficients βfrac and βsoc. Colors represent the dominant preferring neurons (blue points and line), the submissive preferring neurons (red points and line) and all the neurons (black line). Pearson’s correlation coefficient (two-sided): Submissive preferring neurons, r = 0.196, p=0.066, n = 89; Dominant, r = 0.042, p = 0.694, n = 91; All, r = 0.154, p = 0.039, n = 180. B-C. Mean normalized firing plotted for activity during 400 – 700 ms after CS onset for fractal images associated with large, medium and no reward in neuronal populations that exhibited a preference for dominant monkey (B, n=108 neurons) and for submissive monkey (C, n=84 neurons). For neurons in the amygdala that responded most strongly to submissive monkey face images (C), the response is significantly stronger to fractals associated with large rewards than to other fractals associated with no reward (two-sided paired t-test: t(83) = 2.204, p = 0.030). This is not the case for dominant preferring neurons (t(107) = 0.786, p = 0.434). Red diamonds represent mean, white lines represent median, blue bars and whiskers represent 75th and 98th percentiles respectively, blue dots represent data points beyond the whiskers limits, black dots represent neurons within the 98th percentiles interval.
Supplementary Figure 11 The relationship between neural responses to fractals predicting different rewards and face images differing in social rank.
A-H. Average firing rate of amygdala neurons plotted as a function of time for fractal (Large vs. No Reward) and social (M1/dominant vs. M8/submissive monkey) trials. Neurons were partitioned into groups based on the preference of each neuron for the Large (panels A-B, E-F) or No Reward (panels C-D, G-H) trials in the 1st epoch (100-400ms after FP onset, panels A-D) and 2nd epoch (400-700ms after FP onset, panels E-H) separately (p < 0.05, two-sided unpaired t-test). PSTHs were calculated for these groups for both fractal (left panels) and social trials (right panels). Green curves represent PSTHs of Large Reward Fractal and M1 social trials. Red curves represent PSTHs of No Reward Fractal and M8 social trials. Panels A and B contain the same neurons (n = 47), as do C-D (n=34), E-F (n=37) and G-H (n=25). Shaded area, sem. Window: 50ms, Gaussian kernel.
Supplementary Figure 12 Oculomotor behavior in the fixation interval (100–400 ms after image onset) and the first 300 ms (400–700 ms after image onset) of the free viewing epoch.
A. The proportion of the time spent viewing the image during the last 300ms of the fixation interval (minimal differences come from eye blinks). B. The proportion of the time spent viewing the image during the first 300ms of the free viewing interval. C. The time in which gaze was centered on the monkey’s eyes relative to the time spent viewing other parts of the social images in the first 300ms of the free viewing epoch. D. The average reaction time of the first saccade after FP extinction in first 300ms of the free viewing epoch. E. The average number of saccades in first 300ms of the free viewing epoch. Red diamonds represent mean, grey lines represent median, blue bars 75th percentiles and whiskers represent 85th (A to C) or 98th (D,E) percentiles, blue circles represent data points beyond the whiskers limits (A,B,C: n=17 sessions; C: n = 2074 trials without eye blinks in this epoch; D: n = 1164 trials with at least 1 saccadic eye movement in this epoch).
Supplementary Figure 13 Oculomotor behavior in the second 300 ms of the free viewing epoch.
A. The average reaction time of the first saccade (n = 2066 trials without eye blinks in this epoch). B. The average number of saccades. Red diamonds represent mean, grey lines represent median, blue bars and whiskers represent 75th and 98th percentiles respectively, blue circles represent data points beyond the whiskers limits (n = 1175 trials with at least 1 saccadic eye movement in this epoch).
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Munuera, J., Rigotti, M. & Salzman, C.D. Shared neural coding for social hierarchy and reward value in primate amygdala. Nat Neurosci 21, 415–423 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41593-018-0082-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41593-018-0082-8