journal
Journals Frontiers in Evolutionary Neur...

Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience

https://read.qxmd.com/read/23372549/neurobiology-of-human-language-and-its-evolution-primate-and-non-primate-perspectives
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Constance Scharff, Angela D Friederici, Michael Petrides
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2013: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23226128/birdsong-is-it-music-to-their-ears
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah E Earp, Donna L Maney
Since the time of Darwin, biologists have wondered whether birdsong and music may serve similar purposes or have the same evolutionary precursors. Most attempts to compare song with music have focused on the qualities of the sounds themselves, such as melody and rhythm. Song is a signal, however, and as such its meaning is tied inextricably to the response of the receiver. Imaging studies in humans have revealed that hearing music induces neural responses in the mesolimbic reward pathway. In this study, we tested whether the homologous pathway responds in songbirds exposed to conspecific song...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22969721/life-history-theory-and-social-psychology
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Donald F Sacco, Karol Osipowicz
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22912615/birds-primates-and-spoken-language-origins-behavioral-phenotypes-and-neurobiological-substrates
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christopher I Petkov, Erich D Jarvis
Vocal learners such as humans and songbirds can learn to produce elaborate patterns of structurally organized vocalizations, whereas many other vertebrates such as non-human primates and most other bird groups either cannot or do so to a very limited degree. To explain the similarities among humans and vocal-learning birds and the differences with other species, various theories have been proposed. One set of theories are motor theories, which underscore the role of the motor system as an evolutionary substrate for vocal production learning...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22866035/is-dorsal-anterior-cingulate-cortex-activation-in-response-to-social-exclusion-due-to-expectancy-violation-an-fmri-study
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Taishi Kawamoto, Keiichi Onoda, Ken'ichiro Nakashima, Hiroshi Nittono, Shuhei Yamaguchi, Mitsuhiro Ura
People are typically quite sensitive about being accepted or excluded by others. Previous studies have suggested that the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) is a key brain region involved in the detection of social exclusion. However, this region has also been shown to be sensitive to non-social expectancy violations. We often expect other people to follow an unwritten rule in which they include us as they would expect to be included, such that social exclusion likely involves some degree of expectancy violation...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22783189/the-optimal-calibration-hypothesis-how-life-history-modulates-the-brain-s-social-pain-network
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David S Chester, Richard S Pond, Stephanie B Richman, C Nathan Dewall
A growing body of work demonstrates that the brain responds similarly to physical and social injury. Both experiences are associated with activity in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) and anterior insula. This dual functionality of the dACC and anterior insula underscores the evolutionary importance of maintaining interpersonal bonds. Despite the weight that evolution has placed on social injury, the pain response to social rejection varies substantially across individuals. For example, work from our lab demonstrated that the brain's social pain response is moderated by attachment style: anxious-attachment was associated with greater intensity and avoidant-attachment was associated with less intensity in dACC and insula activation...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22783188/the-dual-loop-model-its-relation-to-language-and-other-modalities
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michel Rijntjes, Cornelius Weiller, Tobias Bormann, Mariacristina Musso
The current neurobiological consensus of a general dual loop system scaffolding human and primate brains gives evidence that the dorsal and ventral connections subserve similar functions, independent of the modality and species. However, most current commentators agree that although bees dance and chimpanzees grunt, these systems of communication differ qualitatively from human language. So why is language unique to humans? We discuss anatomical differences between humans and other animals, the meaning of lesion studies in patients, the role of inner speech, and compare functional imaging studies in language with other modalities in respect to the dual loop model...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22701421/learning-to-read-aligns-visual-analytical-skills-with-grapheme-phoneme-mapping-evidence-from-illiterates
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Lachmann, Gunjan Khera, Narayanan Srinivasan, Cees van Leeuwen
Learning to read puts evolutionary established speech and visual object recognition functions to novel use. As we previously showed, this leads to particular rearrangements and differentiations in these functions, for instance the habitual preference for holistic perceptual organization in visual object recognition and its suppression in perceiving letters. We performed the experiment in which the differentiation between holistic non-letter processing and analytic letter processing in literates was originally shown (van Leeuwen and Lachmann, 2004) with illiterate adults...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22615693/ventral-and-dorsal-streams-in-the-evolution-of-speech-and-language
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Josef P Rauschecker
The brains of humans and old-world monkeys show a great deal of anatomical similarity. The auditory cortical system, for instance, is organized into a ventral and a dorsal pathway in both species. A fundamental question with regard to the evolution of speech and language (as well as music) is whether human and monkey brains show principal differences in their organization (e.g., new pathways appearing as a result of a single mutation), or whether species differences are of a more subtle, quantitative nature...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22518103/a-bird-s-eye-view-of-human-language-evolution
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert C Berwick, Gabriël J L Beckers, Kazuo Okanoya, Johan J Bolhuis
COMPARATIVE STUDIES OF LINGUISTIC FACULTIES IN ANIMALS POSE AN EVOLUTIONARY PARADOX: language involves certain perceptual and motor abilities, but it is not clear that this serves as more than an input-output channel for the externalization of language proper. Strikingly, the capability for auditory-vocal learning is not shared with our closest relatives, the apes, but is present in such remotely related groups as songbirds and marine mammals. There is increasing evidence for behavioral, neural, and genetic similarities between speech acquisition and birdsong learning...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22509163/targets-for-a-comparative-neurobiology-of-language
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Justin T Kiggins, Jordan A Comins, Timothy Q Gentner
One longstanding impediment to progress in understanding the neural basis of language is the development of model systems that retain language-relevant cognitive behaviors yet permit invasive cellular neuroscience methods. Recent experiments in songbirds suggest that this group may be developed into a powerful animal model, particularly for components of grammatical processing. It remains unknown, however, what a neuroscience of language perception may look like when instantiated at the cellular or network level...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22470338/the-language-number-interface-in-the-brain-a-complex-parametric-study-of-quantifiers-and-quantities
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefan Heim, Katrin Amunts, Dan Drai, Simon B Eickhoff, Sarah Hautvast, Yosef Grodzinsky
The neural bases for numerosity and language are of perennial interest. In monkeys, neural separation of numerical Estimation and numerical Comparison has been demonstrated. As linguistic and numerical knowledge can only be compared in humans, we used a new fMRI paradigm in an attempt to dissociate Estimation from Comparison, and at the same time uncover the neural relation between numerosity and language. We used complex stimuli: images depicting a proportion between quantities of blue and yellow circles were coupled with sentences containing quantifiers that described them (e...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22347185/language-development-and-the-ontogeny-of-the-dorsal-pathway
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angela D Friederici
In the absence of clear phylogenetic data on the neurobiological basis of the evolution of language, comparative studies across species and across ontogenetic stages within humans may inform us about the possible neural prerequisites of language. In the adult human brain, language-relevant regions located in the frontal and temporal cortex are connected via different fiber tracts: ventral and dorsal pathways. Ontogenetically, it has been shown that newborns display an adult-like ventral pathway at birth. The dorsal pathway, however, seems to display two subparts which mature at different rates: one part, connecting the temporal cortex to the premotor cortex, is present at birth, whereas the other part, connecting the temporal cortex to Broca's area, develops much later and is still not fully matured at the age of seven...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22347184/gestures-vocalizations-and-memory-in-language-origins
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Francisco Aboitiz
THIS ARTICLE DISCUSSES THE POSSIBLE HOMOLOGIES BETWEEN THE HUMAN LANGUAGE NETWORKS AND COMPARABLE AUDITORY PROJECTION SYSTEMS IN THE MACAQUE BRAIN, IN AN ATTEMPT TO RECONCILE TWO EXISTING VIEWS ON LANGUAGE EVOLUTION: one that emphasizes hand control and gestures, and the other that emphasizes auditory-vocal mechanisms. The capacity for language is based on relatively well defined neural substrates whose rudiments have been traced in the non-human primate brain. At its core, this circuit constitutes an auditory-vocal sensorimotor circuit with two main components, a "ventral pathway" connecting anterior auditory regions with anterior ventrolateral prefrontal areas, and a "dorsal pathway" connecting auditory areas with parietal areas and with posterior ventrolateral prefrontal areas via the arcuate fasciculus and the superior longitudinal fasciculus...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22319496/mental-state-attribution-and-body-configuration-in-women
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer A Bremser, Gordon G Gallup
Body configuration is a sexually dimorphic trait. In humans, men tend to have high shoulder-to-hip ratios. Women in contrast, often have low waist-to-hip ratios (WHR); i.e., narrow waists and broad hips that approximate an hour-glass configuration. Women with low WHR's are rated as more attractive, healthier, and more fertile. They also tend to have more attractive voices, lose their virginity sooner, and have more sex partners. WHR has also been linked with general cognitive performance. In the present study we expand upon previous research examining the role of WHR in cognition...
2012: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22347183/the-relationship-between-intelligence-and-anxiety-an-association-with-subcortical-white-matter-metabolism
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeremy D Coplan, Sarah Hodulik, Sanjay J Mathew, Xiangling Mao, Patrick R Hof, Jack M Gorman, Dikoma C Shungu
We have demonstrated in a previous study that a high degree of worry in patients with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) correlates positively with intelligence and that a low degree of worry in healthy subjects correlates positively with intelligence. We have also shown that both worry and intelligence exhibit an inverse correlation with certain metabolites in the subcortical white matter. Here we re-examine the relationships among generalized anxiety, worry, intelligence, and subcortical white matter metabolism in an extended sample...
2011: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22319495/continuity-divergence-and-the-evolution-of-brain-language-pathways
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
James K Rilling, Matthew F Glasser, Saad Jbabdi, Jesper Andersson, Todd M Preuss
Recently, the assumption of evolutionary continuity between humans and non-human primates has been used to bolster the hypothesis that human language is mediated especially by the ventral extreme capsule pathway that mediates auditory object recognition in macaques. Here, we argue for the importance of evolutionary divergence in understanding brain language evolution. We present new comparative data reinforcing our previous conclusion that the dorsal arcuate fasciculus pathway was more significantly modified than the ventral extreme capsule pathway in human evolution...
2011: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22319494/changes-in-physiology-before-during-and-after-yawning
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Timothy P Corey, Melanie L Shoup-Knox, Elana B Gordis, Gordon G Gallup
The ultimate function of yawning continues to be debated. Here, we examine physiological measurements taken before, during, and after yawns in humans, in an attempt to identify key proximate mechanisms associated with this behavior. In two separate studies we measured changes in heart rate, lung volume, eye closure, skin conductance, ear pulse, respiratory sinus arrhythmia, and respiratory rate. Data were depicted from 75 s before and after yawns, and analyzed at baseline, during, and immediately following yawns...
2011: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22207847/the-evolution-of-syntax-an-exaptationist-perspective
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
W Tecumseh Fitch
The evolution of language required elaboration of a number of independent mechanisms in the hominin lineage, including systems involved in signaling, semantics, and syntax. Two perspectives on the evolution of syntax can be contrasted. The "continuist" perspective seeks the evolutionary roots of complex human syntax in simpler combinatory systems used in animal communication systems, such as iteration and sequencing. The "exaptationist" perspective posits evolutionary change of function, so that systems today used for linguistic communication might previously have served quite different functions in earlier hominids...
2011: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22203802/maternal-programming-of-reproductive-function-and-behavior-in-the-female-rat
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicole M Cameron
Parental investment can be used as a forecast for the environmental conditions in which offspring will develop to adulthood. In the rat, maternal behavior is transmitted to the next generation through epigenetic modifications such as methylation and histone acetylation, resulting in variations in estrogen receptor alpha expression. Natural variations in maternal care also influence the sexual strategy adult females will adopt later in life. Lower levels of maternal care are associated with early onset of puberty as well as increased motivation to mate and greater receptivity toward males during mating...
2011: Frontiers in Evolutionary Neuroscience
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