Literature DB >> 17242815

[Considerations about the nervous system phylogenetic evolution, behavior, and the emergence of consciousness].

Guilherme Carvalhal Ribas1.   

Abstract

This text reviews the generic aspects of the central nervous system evolutionary development, emphasizing the developmental features of the brain structures related with behavior and with the cognitive functions that finally characterized the human being. Over the limbic structures that with the advent of mammals were developed on the top of the primitive nervous system of their ancestrals, the ultimate cortical development with neurons arranged in layers constituted the structural base for an enhanced sensory discrimination, for more complex motor activities, and for the development of cognitive and intellectual functions that finally characterized the human being. The knowledge of the central nervous system phylogeny allow us particularly to infer possible correlations between the brain structures that were developed along phylogeny and the behavior of their related beings. In this direction, without discussing its conceptual aspects, this review ends with a discussion about the central nervous system evolutionary development and the emergence of consciousness, in the light of its most recent contributions.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17242815     DOI: 10.1590/S1516-44462006000400015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Braz J Psychiatry        ISSN: 1516-4446            Impact factor:   2.697


  1 in total

1.  Age-related gray matter volume changes in the brain during non-elderly adulthood.

Authors:  Débora Terribilli; Maristela S Schaufelberger; Fábio L S Duran; Marcus V Zanetti; Pedro K Curiati; Paulo R Menezes; Márcia Scazufca; Edson Amaro; Cláudia C Leite; Geraldo F Busatto
Journal:  Neurobiol Aging       Date:  2009-03-12       Impact factor: 4.673

  1 in total

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