A research team clears up 150 years of false assumptions
Credit: RUB, Biopsychlogy.
These findings refute 150-year-old assumptions. The team, published its findings in the journal Science from 25. September 2020.
The largest brains
Birds and mammals have the largest brains in relation to their body. Apart from that, however, they have little in common, according to scientific opinion since the 19th century: mammalian brains have a neocortex, i.e. a cerebral cortex that’s made up of six layers and arranged in columns perpendicular to these layers. Avian brains, on the other hand, look like clumps of grey cells.
“Considering the astonishing cognitive performance that birds can achieve, it seemed reasonable to suspect that their brains are more organised than expected,” says Professor Onur Güntürkün, Head of the Biopsychology Research Unit at the RUB Faculty of Psychology. He and his former doctoral students Dr. Martin Stacho and Dr. Christina Herold proved this in several experiments.
Perfected technology facilitates new insights
In the first step, the researchers deployed a new method perfected by the Düsseldorf and Jülich teams: so-called 3D polarized light imaging, or 3D PLI for short, is capable of displaying the orientation of individual nerve fibres. To the researchers’ surprise, an analysis of the brains of various birds revealed an organisation that is similar to that in the mammalian brain: here too, the fibres are arranged horizontally and vertically in the same way as in the neocortex.
In further experiments, the researchers used tiny crystals, which are absorbed by nerve cells in brain slices and transport them to their smallest dendrites, to examine the interconnection of cells in the bird brain in detail. “Here, too, the structure was shown to consist of columns, in which signals are transmitted from top to bottom and vice versa, and long horizontal fibres,” explains Onur Güntürkün. However, this structure is only found in the sensory areas of the avian brain. Other areas, such as associative areas, are organised in a different way.
Amazing cognitive performance
Some birds are capable of astonishing cognitive performances to rival those of higher developed mammals such as primates. For example, ravens recognise themselves in the mirror and plan for the future. They are also able to put themselves in the position of others, recognise causalities and draw conclusions. Pigeons can learn English spelling up to the level of six-year-old children.
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Funding
The study was funded by the German Research Foundation as part of Collaborative Research Centres 1280 (project no. A01 316803389) and 1372 (project no. Neu04 395940726). Additional funding was supplied by the European Union under the umbrella of the Horizon 2020 Programme (project no. 785907 and 945539).
Original publication
Martin Stacho, Christina Herold, Noemi Rook, Hermann Wagner, Markus Axer, Katrin Amunts, Onur Gu?ntu?rku?n: A cortex-like canonical circuit in the avian forebrain, in: Science, 2020, DOI: 10.1126/science.abc5534
Press contact
Dr. Martin Stacho
Department of Neurophysiology
Faculty of Medicine
Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Germany
Phone: +49 234 32 22042
Email: [email protected]
Prof. Dr. Onur Güntürkün
Biopsychology Research Unit
Faculty of Psychology
Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Germany
Phone: +49 234 32 26213
Email: [email protected]
Media Contact
Prof. Dr. Onur Güntürkün
[email protected]
Original Source
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Related Journal Article
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