| Literature DB >> 24167268 |
Quan Van Le1, Lynne A Isbell, Jumpei Matsumoto, Minh Nguyen, Etsuro Hori, Rafael S Maior, Carlos Tomaz, Anh Hai Tran, Taketoshi Ono, Hisao Nishijo.
Abstract
Snakes and their relationships with humans and other primates have attracted broad attention from multiple fields of study, but not, surprisingly, from neuroscience, despite the involvement of the visual system and strong behavioral and physiological evidence that humans and other primates can detect snakes faster than innocuous objects. Here, we report the existence of neurons in the primate medial and dorsolateral pulvinar that respond selectively to visual images of snakes. Compared with three other categories of stimuli (monkey faces, monkey hands, and geometrical shapes), snakes elicited the strongest, fastest responses, and the responses were not reduced by low spatial filtering. These findings integrate neuroscience with evolutionary biology, anthropology, psychology, herpetology, and primatology by identifying a neurobiological basis for primates' heightened visual sensitivity to snakes, and adding a crucial component to the growing evolutionary perspective that snakes have long shaped our primate lineage.Entities:
Keywords: Snake Detection Theory; evolution; low-pass filtered images; visual responses
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24167268 PMCID: PMC3839741 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1312648110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205