Three dimensions of social relationships distinctly shape attention towards in-group and out-group members.
a, Methodological schematic defining correlations between SEIs and distractor biases towards the in-group and out-group members. b, The distribution of distractor biases on an experimental day for the example Monkey A. Arrows indicate the related mean values (Congruent: In-group: 113.32 ± 37.05 ms, Out-group: 102.21 ± 33.34 ms; Incongruent: In-group: 216.94 ± 40.26 ms, Out-group: 226.08 ± 41.51 ms). c, Individuals in the same group exhibited more social attentions in monkey faces from the out-group, except MC (paired Student’s t-test, MA: p = 2.90×10−3, MK: p = 1.49×10−2, ML: p = 1.01×10−3, MC: p = 0.14). Error bars: Mean ± SEM. d,e, Quantification of weights for three behavioral dimensions computed from the correlations between SEI and distractor bias for in-group (d) and out-group monkeys (e). X, Y and Z axes represent the weights of proximity, grooming, and aggression. The colormap illustrates the correlations between distractor bias and SEIs (r values), which were estimated by varying weights in the model from 0 to 1 with a step of 0.02. The white dot indicates the maximized correlation with the smallest negative r value. Each slice represents the r value surface along the X, Y, and Z axes, respectively. f,g, Pseudo-colored heatmaps (f) and polar graph (g) show the “best” weights for three social dimensions (in-group: ωa = 0.34, ωg = 0.54, ωp = 0.58; out-group: ωa = 0.48, ωg = 0.62, ωp = 0.92). h, The liner relationships between monkeys’ distractor biases and their SEIs with the “best” weights. Error bars: Mean ± SD. i, The differences in the SEIs between any two monkeys in H were scaled hexagonally in the circle, illustrating the magnitude of general social tendency in the colony. Compared to data towards out-group (green lines), the impact of social engagement was smaller when monkeys viewing in-group members (orange lines).