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Mental Synthesis theory: • the mechanism of imagining novel objects involves temporal SYNCHRONIZATION of independent neuronal ensembles. Synchronization no enhanced connections Asynchronously firing neuronal ensembles Perceived as two different objects Synchronously firing neuronal ensembles Perceived as one morphed image The lateral prefrontal cortex as a puppeteer PFC Puppeteer Puppets in the posterior cortex Synchronization Mental Synthesis Lateral PFC • Since the lateral prefrontal cortex plays such a central role in mental synthesis in humans, it would be interesting to see if a homologous brain area was present in other animals. • The lateral prefrontal cortex is present in all primates but is absent in other animals including other mammals (Striedter GF, 2005; Petrides, 2002). • Striedter GF, 2005: “Nonprimate mammals do have a PFC, but it apparently consists of only two major regions, rather than three as in primates. The two conserved prefrontal regions are the orbital prefrontal region, whose neurons respond preferentially to external stimuli that are likely to be rewarding or otherwise significant (Tremblay, 1999; Schoenbaum, 2001), and the anterior cingulate cortex, which mainly process information about the body’s internal state (Nauta, 1971; Luu, 2003). Collectively, these two regions contribute to what we might call the “emotional” aspect of decision making (Damasio, 1994; Dias, 1996; Allman, 2001). The third prefrontal region, which is generally known as the lateral, or granular prefrontal cortex, is apparently unique to primates (Preuss, 1995) and is concerned mainly with the “rational” aspects of decision making. Its neurons respond less rapidly than orbitofrontal neurons to rewarding stimuli and are more selective for the physical attributes of the stimuli, such as their spatial location (Wallis, 2003). Without those lateral prefrontal neurons, primates become less able to retrieve and manipulate information about objects in the outside world (Owen, 1999). In the context of decision making, this probably means that the lateral prefrontal cortex helps primates to consider alternative interpretations of external objects and to construct alternative scenarios of how to interact with them. ... The notion of the lateral prefrontal cortex being a primate innovation originated with Brodmann and has recently been championed by Todd Preuss (1995a). Central to their argument is that small celled granular layer that characterizes the lateral prefrontal cortex in primates is lacking in most other mammals. This finding does indeed suggest that the lateral PFC is unique to primates.” What is so special about primates? 55-million-year-old primate fossil in Chinadubbed Archicebus Achilles • Separated from the rest of mammals some 70 million years ago. • The mammalian ancestors of primates were small nocturnal animals who spent most of their time underground. Following the demise of dinosaurs some 66 million years ago, the competition for aboveground resources diminished and primates evolved into diurnal arboreal animals. • Primates came to occupy the evolutionary niche that heavily depends on vision rather than olfaction for food search and predator avoidance. Reliance on an enhanced sense of vision became the defining feature of all primates. • most primate-typical features reflect the development of the visual system: – primate eyes evolved to a more frontally placed position (presumably to improve depth perception) – Primates also acquired an additional color receptor to better differentiate red from green actual Perceived • Most mammals, including dogs and cats, have only two different kinds of UV color receptors. • Why? • A remote vertebrate ancestor of all mammals possessed 4 color receptors- most fish, UV reptiles and birds still have 4 color receptors • However nocturnal mammalian ancestors lost two of four cones in the retina at the time of dinosaurs all mammals, with the exception of some primates still have only 2 color receptors. • Some primates (including apes) have acquired the third color receptors. • Why? • Some people (2.4% of males) still have two color receptors. • Primates primarily use vision to direct skilled movements, as well as to search for food and avoid predators. • Rodents can also grasp and manipulate objects using the tips of their digits, however rodents are much less visual. Their skilled movements are primarily directed by the sense of touch and olfaction: rats without vision are able to locate and reach for food as quickly as they did before being blinded, but rats without olfaction, who therefore rely more on vision, are significantly slower (Whishaw, 2003). Primates occupied the “finebranch niche” • Collecting ripe fruits and leaves, and hunting for insects. • Primates also acquired more direct corticospinal projections (connections between the cortical neurons and the motor neurons in the spinal cord, which increase fine control over muscles) • an additional cortical area (called the ventral premotor cortical area) specialized for arm and mouth movements (Preuss, 1996). • Furthermore, the control of hand and foot movement benefitted from an increased somatosensory cortex, which, in primates, added several cortical areas that have no homologues in nonprimates. • Striedter concludes: “diverse evolutionary changes in the visual, motor and somatosensory systems all interacted to give early primates exceptionally good hand-eye coordination, which must have come in handy in the fine-branch niche”. • A primate’s survival in the “fine-branch niche” depended on its ability to visually detect predators, prey, and edible objects. • Consequently, primates were under constant evolutionary pressure to recognize those objects faster and from a greater distance. • Visually identifying ripe fruits, leaves, and insects relies on a primate’s ability to separate those objects from the background and from other objects. • Fruits are normally hidden under leaves, leaves in the rainforest merge into thick foliage, and insects tend to camouflage their appearance. • Predators are also often camouflaged and therefore merge into the background. • Furthermore fruits, leaves, insects, and predators often remain motionless, and visual detection of motionless objects is significantly more difficult than detection of moving objects. • Can you find a camouflaged frog amongst the dead leaves in this illustration from the 2015 Johnston Club calendar? • A Leopard conceals herself in vegetation at the base of a tree in Kruger National Park, Transvaal, South Africa • A wolf peering out from behind a tree trunk in an autumn Montana forest What part of the brain is the primary source of topdown attentional control in object perception? • What part of the brain is the primary source of topdown attentional control in object perception? • Meet our old friend the prefrontal cortex. The prefrontal cortex is involved in the maintenance of goal-related information as well as in attentional selection and focus shifting (Fuster JM, 2008). • To succeed in an environment where prey and predators were often motionless, camouflaged, and partially hidden, primates had to rely heavily on their prefrontal cortex to interpret ambiguous sensory input throughout the 70 million years of their evolution. • The prefrontal cortex of diurnal arboreal animals, who relied on their sense of vision to detect prey and predator from afar, was under constant evolutionary pressure to improve its ability to actively steer perception to coordinate subjective goals with objective reality. Primates primarily detect predators and prey visually Prosimians in Madagascar Visual System Modern Humans • Primates exposed to greater predation by venomous snakes acquired a better visual system compared to primates not exposed to venomous snakes (Isbell LA, 2009). New World Old World Homo habilis monkeys of South monkeys and America apes (catarrhines) (platyrrhines)* Immobile Predators Species THE SNAKE DETECTION THEORY (LYNNE A. ISBELL, 2009) interrupted exposure to venomous snakes continuous coexistence with venomous snakes for over 60 million years *The last exposure of the New World monkeys of South America (platyrrhines) to rattlesnakes lasted for only three million years • Recall: some animals cannot visually detect a still object even when it is unambiguous • To locate an immobile prey, most predators use smell or others senses (e.g. infrared radiation), not vision. • For these reptiles it was evolutionarily “easier” to acquire this additional system rather than to develop computational support for the existing visual sensory input. • Visual primates, on the other hand, “chose” to expand their computational system in order to improve detection of Only few snakes can detect infrared radiation: A python (top) and illustrating the positions of the pit organs. Red arrows motionless ambiguous objects. rattlesnake point to the pit organs; Black arrow point to the nostril. Prosimians in Madagascar New World Old World monkeys of South monkeys and America apes (catarrhines) (platyrrhines) Homo habilis Modern Humans Visual System Immobile Predators Species The Mental Synthesis theory (Vyshedskiy, 2008) extends the Snake Detection theory to the evolution of hominins • Hominins foraging in the savanna were exposed to an even greater range of IMMOBILE STALKING predators… • the brain volume increased relatively slowly in australopiths from 350 cm3 to 450 cm3 over 3.5 million years, • but then increased significantly in two major growth spurts: – around 1.8 million years ago and – about 100,000 years ago • The lateral prefrontal cortex underwent the greatest transformation under this evolutionary pressure. Different brain areas are scaled up differently: • the volume of the olfactory bulb in humans is only 30% as large as would be expected in a primate brain of our size, • the volume of V1 is only 60% as large as expected. • Remarkably, the volume of Brodmann area 10 (frontopolar cortex) is nearly 200% as large as expected for a primate brain of our size. • Brodmann measured the PFC size as percent of the total cortex using the cytoarchitectonic method: – – – – – – 29% of in humans, 17% in the chimpanzee, 11.5% in the gibbon and the macaque, 8.5% in the lemur, 7% in the dog, and 3.5% in the cat • Semendeferi K, 2001 (using a precise cytoarchitectonic method): neuronal density in human Brodmann area 10 was around half of that of other primates Brodmann area 10 in humans has a significantly greater portion of its volume dedicated to connections between neurons • Conclusion: Humans’ Brodmann area 10 is nearly 200% as large as expected for a primate brain of our size and that increase in size is due to greater number of connections and myelination (Schoenemann PT, 2005) Greater differential myelination Slower conduction velocity Faster conduction velocity Slower conduction velocity Faster conduction velocity Faster conduction velocity Faster conduction velocity • Without a mechanism that could equalize transit times, the signal from the prefrontal cortex would arrive to its targets in the posterior cortex at different times. • This synchronization mechanism poses a serious challenge that every human needs to solve during development: • These connections must be fine-tuned to become synchronous. More myelin -> faster conduction velocity Less myelin -> slower conduction velocity • Hypothesis: myelination is the primary factor producing uniform conduction time throughout the cortex The lateral prefrontal cortex as a puppeteer PFC Puppeteer Puppets in the posterior cortex Synchronization Mental Synthesis • - DANIEL J. POVINELLI (20min, 2013) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kX49dlbf G9E • - Herbert S. Terrace - Nim Chimpsky DVD