This first phase of the project has seen good progress towards establishing the marmoset groups and develop automated testing systems for macaques and marmosets.
The first result beyond the state of the art has been obtained in an already established group of baboons thanks to external collaboration; it confirms the ability of baboons to learn a voice/nonvoice discrimination task, and establishes psychometric curves for future cross-species comparisons. This suggests the planned experiment in macaques and marmosets will yield interesting results as well. We now are in a od position to perform the planned behavioural, fMRI and electrophysiological experiments of the project, for a comprehensive test of my hypothesis of a primate ‘voice patch system’ shared to a large extent between primates.
Since June 2020, we have advanced well on WP1 for all 3 species: experiments are finalized in baboons, well under way in marmosets, and starting in macaques. We are in a good position to perform the planned experiments over the next years of the project.
In WP2 we have finalized a first comparative fMRI study and revealed important new results: the direct comparison of fMRI data obtained in humans and monkeys using the same scanner and auditory stimuli shows that the two species possess areas of the anterior temporal lobe that not only prefer conspecific vocalizations but also categorize them apart from other sounds in a species-specific, but functionally homologous manner. This suggests that the higher-level auditory cortex of macaques and humans is more similarly organized than currently known. The results have been published in Nov 2021 (Bodin et al, 2021).
IN WP3 we have for the first time implanted chronic multi-electrode arrays in the voice patches of two monkeys in cortical locations previously identified by fMRI. The large amount of data we have collected in these animals, currently under analysis, suggests important new results will be obtained.
Since January 2020 we have acquired data for 5 more experiments, and started analysing this treasure trove of data. The first article form WP3 has been published in PNAS in summer 2024, a second in Science Advances in 2025. Two additional papers are being prepared.