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Garcia-CaleroPuelles20Garcia-Calero, E., & Puelles, L. (2020). Histogenetic Radial Models as Aids to Understanding Complex Brain Structures: The Amygdalar Radial Model as a Recent Example. Frontiers in Neuroanatomy, 14. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnana.2020.590011 See above for overall historical framing. The rest of the paper gets into some deep details that are somewhat hard (for me) to appreciate.
Amygdala
The mouse amygdala is a droopy mess! From Garcia-Calero et al., 2020;
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MorenoGonzalez07Moreno, N., & González, A. (2007). Evolution of the amygdaloid complex in vertebrates, with special reference to the anamnio-amniotic transition. Journal of Anatomy, 211(2), 151–163. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7580.2007.00780.x Note: probably the best comparative review. Key term: hodological -> based on pathways of connectivity
Autonomic amygdala = CeA:
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YamamotoVernier11Yamamoto, K., & Vernier, P. (2011). The Evolution of Dopamine Systems in Chordates. Frontiers in Neuroanatomy, 5. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnana.2011.00021
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Evolutionary Perspective on the Brain
GrillnerRobertson16 shows how an evolutionary, comparative perspective, comparing the Lamprey with mammalian basal ganglia structures, provides important insights into the core functionality of these networks. If a core set of mechanisms is strongly conserved over evolutionary time, then it is clear what the "core" functionality of that system is, providing strong guidance for constructing computational models that should certainly capture that core functionality.
It is also noteworthy that this evolutionary perspective is strongly tied to the developmental processes that shape the embryonic brain (e.g., "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny", at least to some extent). The genetic "knobs" available for evolutionary forces to tweak are principally the duration and location of cell proliferation during embryogenesis, along with various migratory guidance factors that determine who goes where and when -- this is why ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny -- our brains are built up progressively through waves of cell division steps that reflect the branching points of evolutionary choices.
Garcia-CaleroPuelles20 provides an important historical perspective on the field, describing two schools: the orthodox "columnar" approach vs. the heterodox "radial" approach (favored by these authors). The columnar approach is based on coronal slices of adult brains (along arbitrary stereotactic axes), while the radial approach fully embraces the developmental process that is fundamentally "tubular" or radial:
This primordial tube then gets tortuously folded in all manner of ways to fit into the physical space available, creating a complex jumble of adjacencies that would be much simpler to understand by unfolding and flattening everything back into its original simple tubular shape:
The radial approach is the attempt to do this unfolding. It has been particularly successful in understanding the jumble of brain areas that constitute the amygdala, which is a core brain structure spanning multiple brain levels.
Also, the telencephelon (where the cerebral cortex is), is a "evagination" that squirts out beyond the primordial subcortical neural tube -- it may have somewhat different rules.
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