Fig. 6: Relationship between changes in Eccentricity and spontaneous behavioral recovery.

A Non-human primate scoring scale (NHPSS). Aggregate score represents the total. Note that higher total scores represent worse behavioral outcomes. B Trajectories of spontaneous behavioral recovery across animals (N = 23). The light gray lines denote individual recovery curves for each animal. The thick orange, black and green lines denote the maximum, median and minimum curves that correspond to the fPCA curves in (D). C A heat map depicting the correlation (Pearson r) across animals between the different points on the NHPSS curve. D Derivation of animals’ recovery scores. We conducted functional principal component analysis (fPCA) on animals’ NHPSS curves to identify the primary patterns of variability during spontaneous recovery. The top component, representing overall recovery, accounted for 88% of the observed variance. In the plot, green and orange bands illustrate the effects of negative and positive component scores, respectively, relative to mean performance. Animals who recovered better than average have a lower loading (green) on this “Recovery score” component, while those who recovered more poorly than average have a higher loading (orange). The left plot shows Recovery scores based on a median split of the component loadings (Good versus Poor recovery). Single data points denote individuals.