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Journal ArticleDOI

The pyramidal neuron in occipital, temporal and prefrontal cortex of the owl monkey (Aotus trivirgatus): regional specialization in cell structure.

Guy N. Elston
- 01 Mar 2003 - 
- Vol. 17, Iss: 6, pp 1313-1318
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TLDR
PFC pyramidal cells in owl monkeys have relatively few spines, reflecting variation in the extent to which PFC circuitry has become specialized during evolution, which may be of fundamental importance in determining the cognitive styles of the different species.
Abstract
Recent studies have revealed marked regional variation in pyramidal cell morphology in primate cortex. In particular, pyramidal cells in human and macaque prefrontal cortex (PFC) are considerably more spinous than those in other cortical regions. PFC pyramidal cells in the New World marmoset monkey, however, are less spinous than those in man and macaques. Taken together, these data suggest that the pyramidal cell has become more branched and more spinous during the evolution of PFC in only some primate lineages. This specialization may be of fundamental importance in determining the cognitive styles of the different species. However, these data are preliminary, with only one New World and two Old World species having been studied. Moreover, the marmoset data were obtained from different cases. In the present study we investigated PFC pyramidal cells in another New World monkey, the owl monkey, to extend the basis for comparison. As in the New World marmoset monkey, prefrontal pyramidal cells in owl monkeys have relatively few spines. These species differences appear to reflect variation in the extent to which PFC circuitry has become specialized during evolution. Highly complex pyramidal cells in PFC appear not to have been a feature of a common prosimian ancestor, but have evolved with the dramatic expansion of PFC in some anthropoid lineages.

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Citations
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Neuronal circuits of the neocortex

TL;DR: It is found that, as has long been suspected by cortical neuroanatomists, the same basic laminar and tangential organization of the excitatory neurons of the neocortex is evident wherever it has been sought.
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Cortex, Cognition and the Cell: New Insights into the Pyramidal Neuron and Prefrontal Function

TL;DR: It is proposed that without specializations in the structure of pyramidal cells, and the circuits they form, human cognitive processing would not have evolved to its present state.
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Sustained Mnemonic Response in the Human Middle Frontal Gyrus during On-Line Storage of Spatial Memoranda

TL;DR: It is shown that BA 46 can support a sustained mnemonic response for as long as 24 sec in a high-demand task and the signal change in this area exceeded that in the other prefrontal areas examined.
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Role of Prefrontal Persistent Activity in Working Memory

TL;DR: It is shown that persistent activity predicts behavioral parameters precisely in working memory tasks, and it is made the case that prefrontal persistent activity is both necessary and sufficient for the maintenance of information inWorking memory.
References
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An integrative theory of prefrontal cortex function

TL;DR: It is proposed that cognitive control stems from the active maintenance of patterns of activity in the prefrontal cortex that represent goals and the means to achieve them, which provide bias signals to other brain structures whose net effect is to guide the flow of activity along neural pathways that establish the proper mappings between inputs, internal states, and outputs needed to perform a given task.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mnemonic coding of visual space in the monkey's dorsolateral prefrontal cortex

TL;DR: An oculomotor delayed-response task was used to examine the spatial memory functions of neurons in primate prefrontal cortex and found that inhibitory responses were usually strongest for, or centered about, cue directions roughly opposite those optimal for excitatory responses.
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Neuron Activity Related to Short-Term Memory

TL;DR: Nerve cells in the monkey's prefrontal cortex and nucleus medialis dorsalis of the thalamus show changes of firing frequency associated with the performance of a delayed response test, interpreted as suggestive evidence of a role of frontothalamic circuits in the attentive process involved in short-term memory.
Journal ArticleDOI

The prefrontal landscape: implications of functional architecture for understanding human mentation and the central executive

TL;DR: This paper focuses on the working memory processor as a specialization of prefrontal cortex and argues that the different areas within prefrontal cortex represent iterations of this function for different information domains, including spatial cognition, object cognition and additionally, in humans, semantic processing.
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