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- Path: sparky!uunet!tdat!tools3!swf
- From: swf@tools3teradata.com (Stan Friesen)
- Newsgroups: sci.bio
- Subject: Re: Brainsize - the great brain race
- Message-ID: <1721@tdat.teradata.COM>
- Date: 10 Jan 93 18:00:24 GMT
- References: <C0Dt77.Cnn@newcastle.ac.uk> <1704@tdat.teradata.COM> <103884@netnews.upenn.edu>
- Sender: news@tdat.teradata.COM
- Distribution: world
- Organization: NCR Teradata Database Business Unit
- Lines: 45
-
- In article <103884@netnews.upenn.edu>, rowe@pender.ee.upenn.edu (Mickey Rowe) writes:
- |> >Ditto for birds and dinosaurs. Which is, naturally, why it was the
- |> >optic tecta that enlarged in that lineage.
- |>
- |> I'm not so sure about this. Yes, the optic tecta are relatively large
- |> in these lineages, but they're also relatively large in fish and
- |> amphibians.
-
- Hmm, could be. It has been a long time since I reviewed my Comparative
- Neuroanatomy.
-
- |> Furthermore, when vision became more important for
- |> mammals, it was cortex that enlarged even though our tectum (superior
- |> colliculus) is still intimately involved with vision. In cats and
- |> monkeys it's hard to find cortical regions that don't respond to some
- |> sort of visual stimulation...
-
- I would argue that this was due tot he cerbral cortex already being dominant
- in mammals, and thus being the prefered location for new functionality.
- [Or at least so I would speculate].
-
- |> >Though the upper diencephalon (the optic and auditory tecta)
- |>
- |> Sorry to pick nits, but you mean mesencephalon. Diencephalon refers
- |> to thalamic structures.
-
- Oops, you're right! Got my brain regions off by one!
- [Well, actually the diencephalon *also* includes the hypothalamus].
-
- |>
- |> P.S. Stan there's a person over in k12.ed.science who works as an
- |> illustrator of paleo-animals and plants. She (or he, the first name
- |> is Dana) is currently writing a paper about _Allosaurus atrox_ and is
- |> soliciting opinions as to whether or not it could grasp with its
- |> hands. E-mail me if you'd like me to send you a copy of her article
- |> (the posted one, not the one she's publishing).
-
- Sounds like an interesting article, but I doubt I am really qualified to make
- such a judgement for a formal paper.
- [My comparative anatomy is rather stale - I do not use it enough].
-
- --
- sarima@teradata.com (formerly tdatirv!sarima)
- or
- Stanley.Friesen@ElSegundoCA.ncr.com
-