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Comparative Structure and Evolution of Cerebral Cortex, Part I (Hardcover, 1990 ed.)
Loot Price: R5,800
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Comparative Structure and Evolution of Cerebral Cortex, Part I (Hardcover, 1990 ed.)
Series: Cerebral Cortex, 8A
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The cerebral cortex, especially that part customarily designated
"neocortex," is one of the hallmarks of mammalian evolution and
reaches its greatest size, relatively speaking, and its widest
structural diversity in the human brain. The evolution of this
structure, as remarkable for the huge numbers of neurons that it
contains as for the range of behaviors that it controls, has been
of abiding interest to many generations of neuroscientists. Yet few
theories of cortical evo lution have been proposed and none has
stood the test of time. In particular, no theory has been
successful in bridging the evolutionary gap that appears to exist
between the pallium of nonmammalian vertebrates and the neocortex
of mam mals. Undoubtedly this stems in large part from the rapid
divergence of non mammalian and mammalian forms and the lack of
contemporary species whose telencephalic wall can be seen as having
transitional characteristics. The mono treme cortex, for example,
is unquestionably mammalian in organization and that of no living
reptile comes close to resembling it. Yet anatomists such as Ramon
y Cajal, on examining the finer details of cortical structure, were
struck by the similarities in neuronal form, particularly of the
pyramidal cells, and their predisposition to laminar alignment
shared by representatives of all vertebrate classes."
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