Fig. 3: State dynamics. | Nature Communications

Fig. 3: State dynamics.

From: Inferring internal states across mice and monkeys using facial features

Fig. 3

A State transition matrices for macaques (left) and mice (right), that show the probability, at any one trial, of transitioning from a certain state (rows) to any other state (columns). Transitions between different states (off-diagonal terms) are more frequent for mice than for macaques. B Macaques (left plots) spend more time than mice (right plots) in the same state, as measured by the dwell time (number of consecutive trials of each state being the most likely one; nmac [90, 1930], nmou [110, 1160]). Context for these dwell times is given by the trial counts (per session) on the left of each dwell time plot (nmac = 18, nmou = 29). Box plots reflect the median and 25th, 75th percentiles of the dwell time and number of trials per session, with whiskers showing 10th, 90th percentiles; individual dots below the box plots reflect sequences of consecutive trials of a particular state and trial counts per session, respectively.

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