前额皮质的神经生态学观点。

IF 7.9 1区 医学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Rogier B Mars, Richard E Passingham
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引用次数: 0

摘要

类人猿,即猴子、猿和人类,具有很强的适应能力。这种增强的适应性取决于前额皮质新区域的发展。在人类大脑中,这些区域支持推理和决策。我们需要解释我们祖先的前额叶区域是如何被同化的。我们采用神经生态学的观点来应对这一挑战。我们利用了三条证据线:进化生物学解释了早期类人猿灵长类动物的觅食生态位;比较神经科学将人类的大脑与其他现存的灵长类动物的大脑进行比较;计算神经科学详细描述了自由放养行为背后的计算。我们证明,类人猿的适应性增强取决于他们理解抽象概念的能力,如数量、顺序和身份。选择优势是,在觅食时,如果它们与以前遇到的问题有抽象的相似性,它们可以迅速解决问题。我们展示了人类和猴子的哪些前额叶区域是同源的。虽然人类的前额叶皮层特别大,但它的基本组织结构与猕猴相同。我们的结论是,通过我们共同的祖先,人类已经吸收了猕猴用于觅食的能力来支持推理和决策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A NEUROECOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE ON THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX.

The anthropoids, that is monkeys, apes and humans, are highly adaptable. This enhanced adaptability depends on the development of new areas in the prefrontal cortex. In the human brain these regions support reasoning and decision-making. We need to explain how the prefrontal regions of our ancestors were co-opted to allow this. We take up this challenge by adopting a neuroecological perspective. We take advantage of three lines of evidence: evolutionary biology elucidating the foraging niches of early anthropoid primates; comparative neuroscience comparing the human brain with that of other living primates; and computational neuroscience detailing the computations underlying free-ranging behaviour. We demonstrate that the enhanced adaptability of anthropoids depends on their ability to understand abstract concepts such as number, order, and identity. The selective advantage is that when foraging they can solve problems rapidly if they have an abstract similarity to ones they have met previously. We show which prefrontal areas are homologous in humans and monkeys. Though the human prefrontal cortex is especially expanded, it has the same fundamental organisation as in macaques. We conclude that, through our common ancestry, humans have co-opted the abilities that macaques use for foraging to support reasoning and decision-making.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
14.20
自引率
3.70%
发文量
466
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: The official journal of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society publishes original and significant review articles that explore the intersection between neuroscience and the study of psychological processes and behavior. The journal also welcomes articles that primarily focus on psychological processes and behavior, as long as they have relevance to one or more areas of neuroscience.
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