Invited Lectures and Conferences (C-01 — C-51)
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Pages : 1-97
View : 18 | Download : 11
Publication Date : 2016-05-30
Article Type : Other Papers
Abstract :What are the biological fundaments of cognition? Until recently we assumed that the cerebral cortex is a conditio sine qua non for all higher cognitive operations. Only mammals like humans have a cortex. But now we learn that some birds are able to produce cognitive processes that are on par with apes. The problem is that birds have very small brains without a cortex. How is that possible? I will argue that a); birds do not have a cortex but a palliumthat is partly homologous to that of the cortex insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(implication #1: cortical lamination is not a requirement for complex cognition);; b); similar neural circuits can be found in the forebrains of birds and mammals insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(implication #2: some cognitive function require certain circuits. These then evolve convergently in practically the same way in the different branches of evolution);; c); brain size does not correlate when comparing birds and mammals insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(implication #3: brain size or neuron numbers are useless proxies for cognitive complexity when comparing brains that have different anatomical designs);.Keywords : Invited, Lectures, Conferences