Pereira-Pedro Ana Sofia, Rilling James K, Chen Xu, Preuss Todd M, Bruner Emiliano
Grupo de Paleoneurología, Centro Nacional de Investigación sobre la Evolución Humana, Burgos, Spain.
Brain Behav Evol. 2017;90(3):255-263. doi: 10.1159/000481085. Epub 2017 Oct 25.
The precuneus is a major element of the superior parietal lobule, positioned on the medial side of the hemisphere and reaching the dorsal surface of the brain. It is a crucial functional region for visuospatial integration, visual imagery, and body coordination. Previously, we argued that the precuneus expanded in recent human evolution, based on a combination of paleontological, comparative, and intraspecific evidence from fossil and modern human endocasts as well as from human and chimpanzee brains. The longitudinal proportions of this region are a major source of anatomical variation among adult humans and, being much larger in Homo sapiens, is the main characteristic differentiating human midsagittal brain morphology from that of our closest living primate relative, the chimpanzee. In the current shape analysis, we examine precuneus variation in non-human primates through landmark-based models, to evaluate the general pattern of variability in non-human primates, and to test whether precuneus proportions are influenced by allometric effects of brain size. Results show that precuneus proportions do not covary with brain size, and that the main difference between monkeys and apes involves a vertical expansion of the frontal and occipital regions in apes. Such differences might reflect differences in brain proportions or differences in cranial architecture. In this sample, precuneus variation is apparently not influenced by phylogenetic or allometric factors, but does vary consistently within species, at least in chimpanzees and macaques. This result further supports the hypothesis that precuneus expansion in modern humans is not merely a consequence of increasing brain size or of allometric scaling, but rather represents a species-specific morphological change in our lineage.
楔前叶是顶上小叶的主要组成部分,位于大脑半球内侧并延伸至脑的背表面。它是视觉空间整合、视觉想象和身体协调的关键功能区域。此前,基于来自化石和现代人类脑模型以及人类和黑猩猩大脑的古生物学、比较和种内证据,我们认为楔前叶在人类近期进化过程中有所扩展。该区域的纵向比例是成年人类解剖变异的主要来源,并且在智人中要大得多,这是将人类正中矢状面脑形态与我们现存最近的灵长类近亲黑猩猩区分开来的主要特征。在当前的形状分析中,我们通过基于地标点的模型来研究非人类灵长类动物的楔前叶变异,以评估非人类灵长类动物变异的一般模式,并测试楔前叶比例是否受脑容量的异速生长效应影响。结果表明,楔前叶比例与脑容量不相关,并且猴子和猿类之间的主要差异涉及猿类额叶和枕叶区域的垂直扩展化。这种差异可能反映了脑比例的差异或颅骨结构的差异。在这个样本中,楔前叶变异显然不受系统发育或异速生长因素的影响,但在物种内部确实存在一致的变化,至少在黑猩猩和猕猴中是这样。这一结果进一步支持了这样的假设,即现代人类楔前叶的扩展不仅仅是脑容量增加或异速生长缩放的结果,而是代表了我们谱系中一种特定物种的形态变化。