Hakeem Atiya Y, Sherwood Chet C, Bonar Christopher J, Butti Camilla, Hof Patrick R, Allman John M
Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, 1200 E. California Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91125, USA.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2009 Feb;292(2):242-8. doi: 10.1002/ar.20829.
Von Economo neurons (VENs), previously found in humans, all of the great ape species, and four cetacean species, are also present in African and Indian elephants. The VENs in the elephant are primarily found in similar locations to those in the other species. They are most abundant in the frontoinsular cortex (area FI) and are also present at lower density in the anterior cingulate cortex. Additionally, they are found in a dorsolateral prefrontal area and less abundantly in the region of the frontal pole. The VEN morphology appears to have arisen independently in hominids, cetaceans, and elephants, and may reflect a specialization for the rapid transmission of crucial social information in very large brains.
冯·埃科诺莫神经元(VENs)先前已在人类、所有大型猿类物种以及四种鲸类物种中发现,在非洲象和印度象中也存在。大象体内的冯·埃科诺莫神经元主要分布在与其他物种相似的位置。它们在额岛叶皮质(FI区)最为丰富,在前扣带回皮质中密度较低。此外,它们还存在于背外侧前额叶区域,在额极区域分布较少。冯·埃科诺莫神经元的形态似乎在人类、鲸类和大象中独立出现,可能反映了在非常大的大脑中快速传递关键社会信息的一种特化。