Literature DB >> 1137814

Origins of anthropoid intelligence.

B Masterton, L C Skeen, M J RoBards.   

Abstract

The development of the extrastriate visual system relative to the striate system was estimated indirectly by measuring the volumes of the lateral posteriorpulvinar complex and lateral geniculate nucleus in six varieties of mammals selected on the basis of their propinquity with Anthropoidea [oppossums, hedgehogs, rats, squirrels, tree shrews and bushbabies]. The same animals were tested on two related behavioral tasks [spatial and visual reversal learning] whose successful achievement requires a simple sort of abstraction. The results show that the ability to learn visual reversal, but not spatial reversal, corresponds closely to the relative degree of development of the extrastriate system. Since the variation in both these behavioral and morphological characteristics also parallels the phylogenetic dimension, the recency of common ancestry to anthropoids, the evolutionary origin of the anthropoid capacity for visual abstraction is suggested.

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Year:  1975        PMID: 1137814     DOI: 10.1159/000124322

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Behav Evol        ISSN: 0006-8977            Impact factor:   1.808


  1 in total

1.  The prenatal development of the pulvinar in the monkey: 3H-thymidine autoradiographic and morphometric analyses.

Authors:  M P Ogren; P Racic
Journal:  Anat Embryol (Berl)       Date:  1981
  1 in total

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