Evolutionary Anatomy of the Primate Cerebral Cortex
Herausgeber: Falk, Dean; Gibson, Kathleen R.
Evolutionary Anatomy of the Primate Cerebral Cortex
Herausgeber: Falk, Dean; Gibson, Kathleen R.
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Review of brain evolution in primates including humans.
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Review of brain evolution in primates including humans.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 364
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Juli 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 553g
- ISBN-13: 9780521089951
- ISBN-10: 0521089956
- Artikelnr.: 25445406
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 364
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Juli 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 553g
- ISBN-13: 9780521089951
- ISBN-10: 0521089956
- Artikelnr.: 25445406
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Preface; Prologue Stephen J. Gould; Introduction to Part I Kathleen Gibson;
Part I. The Evolution of Brain Size: 1. Encephalization and its
developmental structure: how many ways can a brain get big? Peter M. Kaskan
and Barbara L. Finlay; 2. Neocortical expansion and elaboration during
primate evolution: a view from neuroembryology Pasko Rakic and David R.
Kornack; 3. In defense of the expensive tissue hypothesis Leslie C. Aiello,
Nicola Bates and Tracey Joffe; 4. Bigger is better: primate brain size in
relationship to cognition Kathleen Gibson, Duane Rumbaugh and Michael
Beran; 5. The evolution of sex differences in primate brains Dean Falk; 6.
Brain evolution in hominids: are we at the end of the road? Michel A.
Hofman; Introduction to Part II Dean Falk; Part II. Neurological Substrates
of Species-Specific Adaptations: 7. The discovery of cerebral diversity: an
unwelcome scientific revolution Todd M. Preuss; 8. Pheromonal communication
and socialization Brunetto Chiarelli; 9. Revisiting australopithecine
visual striate cortex: newer data from chimpanzee and human brains suggest
it could have been reduced during australopithecine times Ralph L.
Holloway, Douglas C. Broadfield and Michael S. Yuan; 10. Structural
symmetries and asymmetries in human and chimpanzee brains Emmanuel
Gilissen; 11. Language areas of the hominid brain: a dynamic communicative
shift on the upper east side planum Patrick J. Gannon, Nancy M. Kheck and
Patrick R. Hof; 12. The promise and the peril in hominid brain evolution
Phillip V. Tobias; 13. Advances in the study of hominid brain evolution:
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 3-D reconstruction Katerina
Semendeferi; 14. Exo- and endocranial morphometrics in mid-Pleistocene and
modern humans Katrin Schafer, Horst Seidler, Fred L. Bookstein, Hermann
Prossinger, Dean Falk and Glenn Conroy; Epilogue: the study of primate
brain evolution: where do we go from here? Harry Jerison.
Part I. The Evolution of Brain Size: 1. Encephalization and its
developmental structure: how many ways can a brain get big? Peter M. Kaskan
and Barbara L. Finlay; 2. Neocortical expansion and elaboration during
primate evolution: a view from neuroembryology Pasko Rakic and David R.
Kornack; 3. In defense of the expensive tissue hypothesis Leslie C. Aiello,
Nicola Bates and Tracey Joffe; 4. Bigger is better: primate brain size in
relationship to cognition Kathleen Gibson, Duane Rumbaugh and Michael
Beran; 5. The evolution of sex differences in primate brains Dean Falk; 6.
Brain evolution in hominids: are we at the end of the road? Michel A.
Hofman; Introduction to Part II Dean Falk; Part II. Neurological Substrates
of Species-Specific Adaptations: 7. The discovery of cerebral diversity: an
unwelcome scientific revolution Todd M. Preuss; 8. Pheromonal communication
and socialization Brunetto Chiarelli; 9. Revisiting australopithecine
visual striate cortex: newer data from chimpanzee and human brains suggest
it could have been reduced during australopithecine times Ralph L.
Holloway, Douglas C. Broadfield and Michael S. Yuan; 10. Structural
symmetries and asymmetries in human and chimpanzee brains Emmanuel
Gilissen; 11. Language areas of the hominid brain: a dynamic communicative
shift on the upper east side planum Patrick J. Gannon, Nancy M. Kheck and
Patrick R. Hof; 12. The promise and the peril in hominid brain evolution
Phillip V. Tobias; 13. Advances in the study of hominid brain evolution:
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 3-D reconstruction Katerina
Semendeferi; 14. Exo- and endocranial morphometrics in mid-Pleistocene and
modern humans Katrin Schafer, Horst Seidler, Fred L. Bookstein, Hermann
Prossinger, Dean Falk and Glenn Conroy; Epilogue: the study of primate
brain evolution: where do we go from here? Harry Jerison.
Preface; Prologue Stephen J. Gould; Introduction to Part I Kathleen Gibson;
Part I. The Evolution of Brain Size: 1. Encephalization and its
developmental structure: how many ways can a brain get big? Peter M. Kaskan
and Barbara L. Finlay; 2. Neocortical expansion and elaboration during
primate evolution: a view from neuroembryology Pasko Rakic and David R.
Kornack; 3. In defense of the expensive tissue hypothesis Leslie C. Aiello,
Nicola Bates and Tracey Joffe; 4. Bigger is better: primate brain size in
relationship to cognition Kathleen Gibson, Duane Rumbaugh and Michael
Beran; 5. The evolution of sex differences in primate brains Dean Falk; 6.
Brain evolution in hominids: are we at the end of the road? Michel A.
Hofman; Introduction to Part II Dean Falk; Part II. Neurological Substrates
of Species-Specific Adaptations: 7. The discovery of cerebral diversity: an
unwelcome scientific revolution Todd M. Preuss; 8. Pheromonal communication
and socialization Brunetto Chiarelli; 9. Revisiting australopithecine
visual striate cortex: newer data from chimpanzee and human brains suggest
it could have been reduced during australopithecine times Ralph L.
Holloway, Douglas C. Broadfield and Michael S. Yuan; 10. Structural
symmetries and asymmetries in human and chimpanzee brains Emmanuel
Gilissen; 11. Language areas of the hominid brain: a dynamic communicative
shift on the upper east side planum Patrick J. Gannon, Nancy M. Kheck and
Patrick R. Hof; 12. The promise and the peril in hominid brain evolution
Phillip V. Tobias; 13. Advances in the study of hominid brain evolution:
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 3-D reconstruction Katerina
Semendeferi; 14. Exo- and endocranial morphometrics in mid-Pleistocene and
modern humans Katrin Schafer, Horst Seidler, Fred L. Bookstein, Hermann
Prossinger, Dean Falk and Glenn Conroy; Epilogue: the study of primate
brain evolution: where do we go from here? Harry Jerison.
Part I. The Evolution of Brain Size: 1. Encephalization and its
developmental structure: how many ways can a brain get big? Peter M. Kaskan
and Barbara L. Finlay; 2. Neocortical expansion and elaboration during
primate evolution: a view from neuroembryology Pasko Rakic and David R.
Kornack; 3. In defense of the expensive tissue hypothesis Leslie C. Aiello,
Nicola Bates and Tracey Joffe; 4. Bigger is better: primate brain size in
relationship to cognition Kathleen Gibson, Duane Rumbaugh and Michael
Beran; 5. The evolution of sex differences in primate brains Dean Falk; 6.
Brain evolution in hominids: are we at the end of the road? Michel A.
Hofman; Introduction to Part II Dean Falk; Part II. Neurological Substrates
of Species-Specific Adaptations: 7. The discovery of cerebral diversity: an
unwelcome scientific revolution Todd M. Preuss; 8. Pheromonal communication
and socialization Brunetto Chiarelli; 9. Revisiting australopithecine
visual striate cortex: newer data from chimpanzee and human brains suggest
it could have been reduced during australopithecine times Ralph L.
Holloway, Douglas C. Broadfield and Michael S. Yuan; 10. Structural
symmetries and asymmetries in human and chimpanzee brains Emmanuel
Gilissen; 11. Language areas of the hominid brain: a dynamic communicative
shift on the upper east side planum Patrick J. Gannon, Nancy M. Kheck and
Patrick R. Hof; 12. The promise and the peril in hominid brain evolution
Phillip V. Tobias; 13. Advances in the study of hominid brain evolution:
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and 3-D reconstruction Katerina
Semendeferi; 14. Exo- and endocranial morphometrics in mid-Pleistocene and
modern humans Katrin Schafer, Horst Seidler, Fred L. Bookstein, Hermann
Prossinger, Dean Falk and Glenn Conroy; Epilogue: the study of primate
brain evolution: where do we go from here? Harry Jerison.