Barton R A
Department of Anthropology, University of Durham, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 1998 Oct 22;265(1409):1933-7. doi: 10.1098/rspb.1998.0523.
Several theories have been proposed to explain the evolution of species differences in brain size, but no consensus has emerged. One unresolved question is whether brain size differences are a result of neural specializations or of biological constraints affecting the whole brain. Here I show that, among primates, brain size variation is associated with visual specialization. Primates with large brains for their body size have relatively expanded visual brain areas, including the primary visual cortex and lateral geniculate nucleus. Within the visual system, it is, in particular, one functionally specialized pathway upon which selection has acted: evolutionary changes in the number of neurons in parvocellular, but not magnocellular, layers of the lateral geniculate nucleus are correlated with changes in both brain size and ecological variables (diet and social group size). Given the known functions of the parvocellular pathway, these results suggest that the relatively large brains of frugivorous species are products of selection on the ability to perceive and select fruits using specific visual cues such as colour. The separate correlation between group size and visual brain evolution, on the other hand, may indicate the visual basis of social information processing in the primate brain.
人们已经提出了几种理论来解释物种脑容量差异的进化,但尚未达成共识。一个尚未解决的问题是,脑容量差异是神经特化的结果,还是影响整个大脑的生物学限制因素导致的。在这里,我表明,在灵长类动物中,脑容量的变化与视觉特化有关。相对于身体大小而言脑容量较大的灵长类动物,其视觉脑区相对扩大,包括初级视觉皮层和外侧膝状体核。在视觉系统中,特别是一条功能特化的通路受到了选择作用:外侧膝状体核小细胞层而非大细胞层中神经元数量的进化变化与脑容量和生态变量(饮食和社会群体大小)的变化相关。鉴于小细胞通路的已知功能,这些结果表明,食果动物相对较大的大脑是对利用颜色等特定视觉线索感知和选择果实能力进行选择的产物。另一方面,群体大小与视觉脑进化之间的独立相关性,可能表明灵长类动物大脑中社会信息处理的视觉基础。