The prefrontal cortex makes up almost a quarter of the human brain, and it expanded dramatically during primate evolution. The Neurobiology of the Prefrontal Cortex presents a new theory about its fundamental function. In this important new book, the authors argue that primate-specific parts of the prefrontal cortex evolved to reduce errors in foraging choices, so that particular ancestors of modern humans could overcome periodic food shortages. These developments laid the foundation for working out problems in our imagination, which resulted in the insights that allow humans to avoid errors entirely, at least at times. In the book, the authors detail which parts of the prefrontal cortex evolved exclusively in primates, how its connections explain why the prefrontal cortex alone can perform its function, and why other parts of the brain cannot do what the prefrontal cortex does. Based on an analysis of its evolutionary history, the book uses evidence from lesion, imaging, and cell-recording experiments to argue that the primate prefrontal cortex generates goals from a current behavioural context and that it can do so on the basis of single events. As a result, the prefrontal cortex uses the attentive control of behaviour to augment an older general-purpose learning system, one that evolved very early in the history of animals. This older system learns slowly and cumulatively over many experiences based on reinforcement. The authors argue that a new learning system evolved in primates at a particular time and place in their history, that it did so to decrease the errors inherent in the older learning system, and that severe volatility of food resources provided the driving force for these developments. Written by two leading brain scientists, The Neurobiology of the Prefrontal Cortex is an important contribution to our understanding of the evolution and functioning of the human brain.
Prominent investigators in the fields of neuroscience and behavior come together in this volume to examine the brain's prefrontal cortex. Exploring evolutionary issues, neurobiology, neuropsychology, and neuropathology, these experts advance...
The Prefrontal Cortex: Anatomy, Physiology, and Neuropsychology of the Frontal Lobe
The book ends with a final section in which these principles are applied to the human brain.
J Neurosci, 27, 14365–74. Hayden, B.Y., Pearson, J.M., & Platt, M.L. (2009) Fictive reward signals in the anterior cingulate cortex. Science, 324, 948–50. Hayden, B.Y., Pearson, J.M., & Platt, M.L. (2011) Neuronal basis of sequential ...
This volume describes the new field of cognitive neuroscience - the study of what happens in the brain when we perceive, think, reason, remember, and act.
The concept is explored in depth, as are the ethical and legal implications of our understanding of free will. This book arises out of a workshop held in California in April of 2007, which was chaired by Dr. Christof Koch.
Milham, M. P., Bainch, M. T., Webb, A., Barad, V., Cohen, N. J ., Wszalek, T., & Kramer, A. F. (2001). The relative involvement of ... Montague, P. R., Dayan, P., Pearson, C., & Sejnowski, T. J. (1995). Bee foraging in uncertain ...
This book brings together and presents the latest findings of socioemotional studies emerging from the developmental branches of various disciplines.
A scientific, uniquely factual account of the role of the brain in freedom and creativity.
The approach of this text is to confirm the association of these brain regions by verifying that damage to the activated brain area results in a consistent deficit in the cognitive/behavioral operation under investigation.