(Press-News.org) A researcher from Imperial College London and his colleagues have developed for the first time a map of a typical bird brain, showing how different regions are connected together to process information. By comparing it to brain diagrams for different mammals such as humans, the team discovered that areas important for high-level cognition such as long-term memory and problem solving are wired up to other regions of the brain in a similar way. This is despite the fact that both mammal and bird brains have been evolving down separate paths over hundreds of millions of years.
The team suggest that evolution has discovered a common blueprint for high-level cognition in brain development.
Birds have been shown in previous studies to possess a range of skills such as a capacity for complex social reasoning, an ability to problem solve and some have even demonstrated the capability to craft and use tools.
Professor Murray Shanahan, author of the study from the Department of Computing at Imperial College London, says: "Birds have been evolving separately from mammals for around 300 million years, so it is hardly surprising that under a microscope the brain of a bird looks quite different from a mammal. Yet, birds have been shown to be remarkably intelligent in a similar way to mammals such as humans and monkeys. Our study demonstrates that by looking at brains that are least like our own, yet still capable of generating intelligent behaviour, we can determine the basic principles governing the way brains work."
The team developed their map by analysing 34 studies of the anatomy of the pigeon brain, which is typical for a bird. They focussed on areas called 'hub nodes', which are regions of the brain that are major centres for processing information and are important for high level cognition.
In particular, they looked at the hippocampus, which is important for navigation and long-term memory in both birds and mammals. They found that these hub nodes had very dense connections to other parts of the brain in both kinds of animal, suggesting they function in a similar way.
They also compared the prefrontal cortex in mammals, which is important for complex thought such as decision making, with the nidopallium caudolaterale, which has a similar role in birds. They discovered that despite both hub nodes having evolved differently, the way they are wired up within the brain looks similar.
The long-term goal of the team is to use the information generated from the wiring diagram to build computer models that mimic the way that animal brains function, which would be used to control a robot.
The study was published this month in the Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience journal.
###
Birds and humans have similar brain wiring
You may have more in common with a pigeon than you realize, according to research
2013-07-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Danish survey evaluates the content of chemical contaminants in food
2013-07-17
The National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark has evaluated the content of chemical contaminants in food in the period 2004-2011 at the request of the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration.
The content of chemical contaminants is evaluated in relation to which specific foods Danes eat, and how much. The latest monitoring report includes even more compounds than the one from 2003.
"Monitoring of unwanted compounds is performed to ensure that the food eaten by the Danish people does not contain too many harmful compounds. In general, Danes should not ...
Deciphering butterflies' designer colors: Findings could inspire new hue-changing materials
2013-07-17
WASHINGTON, July 17—Butterfly wings can do remarkable things with light, and humans are still trying to learn from them. Physicists have now uncovered how subtle differences in the tiny crystals of butterfly wings create stunningly varied patterns of color even among closely related species. The discovery, reported today in the Optical Society's (OSA) open-access journal Optical Materials Express, could lead to new coatings for manufactured materials that could change color by design, if researchers can figure out how to replicate the wings' light-manipulating properties.
"It ...
The key to ion beams' polarizability
2013-07-17
Polarisability determines the force with which an inhomogeneous external electric field acts on the ions of an ion beam. However, it can be quite tricky to obtain accurate values for this force. Now, two German theoretical chemists, Volker Koch from Bielefeld University and Dirk Andrae from the Free University Berlin, have devised formulas providing the polarisability of atomic ions as a function of their total charge number. Their findings, about to be published in EPJ D, have implications for many applications, ranging from the use of ion beams for research purposes or ...
Monkey nation: Study confirms wealth of primates in Tanzania
2013-07-17
NEW YORK (July 17, 2013) — A five-year study by the Wildlife Conservation Society gives new hope to some of the world's most endangered primates by establishing a roadmap to protect all 27 species in Tanzania – the most primate-diverse country in mainland Africa.
The study combines Tanzania's first-ever inventory of all primate species and their habitats with IUCN Red List criteria and other factors such as threats and rarity, ranking all 27 species from most vulnerable to least vulnerable. The authors then identify a network of "Priority Primate Areas" for conservation. ...
A new Anagnorisma moth species from the beautiful Binaloud Mountain Iran
2013-07-17
Researchers described a new species of Noctuidae moth from Iran which is the fifth described species of the genus Anagnorisma. The new species A. chamrani has its name in honour of Dr. Mostafa Chamran (1932–1981), an Iranian scientist and defence minister. The study was published in the open access journal Zookeys.
During an expedition at high altitude of above 2500 m of north-eastern Iran on a cold night in late summer 2012, a couple of undescribed specimens of Anagnorisma moths were collected. The specimens had been attracted to an ultraviolet light trap on the Binaloud ...
NASA sees Tropical Storm Cimaron pass between Taiwan and the Philippines
2013-07-17
Tropical Depression 08W strengthened into a tropical storm and was renamed Cimaron by the morning of July 17. NASA's Aqua satellite captured the storm is it passed between the northern Philippines and Taiwan.
On July 17 at 0900 UTC, Tropical Storm Cimaron was located about 294 nautical miles (338.3 miles/544.5 km) north of Manila, Philippines, near 19.9 north latitude and 120.8 east longitude. Cimaron's maximum sustained winds increased to 35 knots (40 mph/64 kph) and the tropical storm is moving to the northwest at 18 knots (20.7 mph/33.3 kph). Cimaron is generating ...
Mountain Fire in California
2013-07-17
Inciweb.org reports, "The Mountain Fire started at 1:43 PM on July 15, 2013 near the junction of Highway 243 and Highway 74. It is currently burning east of the Mountain Center and Apple Canyon Areas. It is burning in very steep and rugged terrain in the southern portion of the San Jacinto Wilderness along the Desert Divide and in the Apple Canyon and Bonita Vista Areas. Some residences and commercial buildings have been destroyed by the fire, though firefighters were able to defend and save a larger number of homes.
Mandatory evacuation orders are in place for Andreas ...
Cost of treating dizziness in the emergency room soars
2013-07-17
A new Johns Hopkins research report says emergency room visits for severe dizziness have grown exponentially in recent years, with costs topping $3.9 billion in 2011 and projected to reach $4.4 billion by 2015. The investigators say roughly half a billion a year could be saved immediately if emergency room physicians stopped the routine and excessive use of head CT scans to search for stroke in dizzy patients, and instead used simple bedside physical exams to identify the small group of patients that truly needs imaging.
After analyzing records from two large, national ...
Researchers target the Achilles' heel of bacteria behind hospital-associated infections
2013-07-17
MANHATTAN -- Kansas State University researchers are defeating persistent bacteria known for causing infections in hospitals.
The bacteria, Enterococcus faecalis, are the second-leading cause of hospital-associated infections in the U.S., said Lynn Hancock, associate professor of biology and leader of the research. His team has discovered how a regulatory system helps this bacteria resist a host's innate immune defense -- a finding that may help develop novel drug compounds to fight the bacteria.
"Right now, we have very limited therapeutic interventions because the ...
A heart of gold
2013-07-17
Heart tissue sustains irreparable damage in the wake of a heart attack. Because cells in the heart cannot multiply and the cardiac muscle contains few stem cells, the tissue is unable to repair itself — it becomes fibrotic and cannot contract properly.
In their search for innovative methods to restore heart function, scientists have been exploring cardiac "patches" that could be transplanted into the body to replace damaged heart tissue. Now, in his Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine Laboratory, Dr. Tal Dvir and his PhD student Michal Shevach of Tel Aviv University's ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Does exercise really improve mental health?
Behind the ballistics of the “explosive” squirting cucumber
Researchers find compound that inhibits cutaneous HPVs
City of Hope Research Spotlight, April/May 2025
The gut microbiota in elderly patients with acute hepatitis E infection
The Three Gorges region of the Yangtze River hits record high temperatures in 2024
Experts urge evidence-based regulations of 7-OH, not restriction, as new science emerges showing safe use
Genes for surviving plague in prairie dogs
New research shows AI chatbots should not replace your therapist
Pusan National University researchers reveal middle-class families hit hardest by South Korea's cost-of-living crisis
Understanding how heat stress reshapes fat metabolism in chickens
Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Innovative Genomics Institute announce new Center for Pediatric CRISPR Cures
Innovative liquid biopsy test uses RNA to detect early-stage cancer
New quantum record: Transmon qubit coherence reaches millisecond threshold
How Germany’s 2021 floods could have been even worse
Study traces evolutionary origins of important enzyme complex
Tiny antibody has big impact on deadly viruses
Scientists find new way to control electricity at tiniest scale
Heat and heavy metals are changing the way that bees buzz
What’s behind the enormous increase in early-onset gastrointestinal cancers?
Pharmacogenomics expert advances precision medicine for bipolar disorder
Brazilian researcher explores centenarian stem cells for aging insights
Dr. Xuyu Qian's breakthrough analysis of 18 million brain cells advances understanding of human brain development
Gene networks decode human brain architecture from health to glioma
How artificial light at night damages brain health and metabolism
For ultrasound, ultra-strength not always a good thing
Matching your workouts to your personality could make exercising more enjoyable and give you better results
Study shows people perceive biodiversity
Personality type can predict which forms of exercise people enjoy
People can accurately judge biodiversity through sight and sound
[Press-News.org] Birds and humans have similar brain wiringYou may have more in common with a pigeon than you realize, according to research