- See Also
-
Links
- “Avian Neurons Consume 3× Less Glucose Than Mammalian Neurons”, Eugen et al 2022
- “Neuron Numbers Link Innovativeness With Both Absolute and Relative Brain Size in Birds”, Sol et al 2022
- “Theropod Dinosaurs Had Primate-like Numbers of Telencephalic Neurons”, Herculano-Houzel 2022
- “High Associative Neuron Numbers Could Drive Cognitive Performance in Corvid Species”, Ströckens et al 2022
- “The Evolution of Brain Neuron Numbers in Amniotes”, Kverková et al 2022
- “The Evolution of Quantitative Sensitivity”, Bryer et al 2021
- “Parental Provisioning Drives Brain Size in Birds”, Griesser et al 2021
- “Vultures As an Overlooked Model in Cognitive Ecology”, Overveld et al 2021
- “Behavioral and Neuronal Representation of Numerosity Zero in the Crow”, Kirschhock et al 2021
- “A Cortex-like Canonical Circuit in the Avian Forebrain”, Stacho et al 2020
- “A Neural Correlate of Sensory Consciousness in a Corvid Bird”, Nieder et al 2020
- “Birds Do Have a Brain Cortex—and Think: Like Mammals, Birds Have a Pallium That Sustains Correlates of Consciousness”, Herculano-Houzel 2020
- “Brainiacs, Not Birdbrains: Crows Possess Higher Intelligence Long Thought a Primarily Human Attribute”, Begley 2020
- “Big Brains Stabilize Populations and Facilitate Colonization of Variable Habitats in Birds”, Fristoe et al 2017
- “Light Enough to Travel or Wise Enough to Stay? Brain Size Evolution and Migratory Behavior in Birds”, Vincze 2016
- “Birds Have Primate-like Numbers of Neurons in the Forebrain”, Olkowicz et al 2016
- “Cognition without Cortex”, Güntürkün & Bugnyar 2016
- “Neuronal Factors Determining High Intelligence”, Dicke & Roth 2016
- “Seasonal Plasticity in the Adult Brain”, Tramontin & Brenowitz 2000
- “Seasonal Plasticity in the Song Nuclei of Wild Rufous-sided Towhees”, Smith 1996
- Sort By Magic
- Wikipedia
- Miscellaneous
- Link Bibliography
See Also
Links
“Avian Neurons Consume 3× Less Glucose Than Mammalian Neurons”, Eugen et al 2022
“Avian neurons consume 3× less glucose than mammalian neurons”
“Neuron Numbers Link Innovativeness With Both Absolute and Relative Brain Size in Birds”, Sol et al 2022
“Neuron numbers link innovativeness with both absolute and relative brain size in birds”
“Theropod Dinosaurs Had Primate-like Numbers of Telencephalic Neurons”, Herculano-Houzel 2022
“Theropod dinosaurs had primate-like numbers of telencephalic neurons”
“High Associative Neuron Numbers Could Drive Cognitive Performance in Corvid Species”, Ströckens et al 2022
“High associative neuron numbers could drive cognitive performance in corvid species”
“The Evolution of Brain Neuron Numbers in Amniotes”, Kverková et al 2022
“The Evolution of Quantitative Sensitivity”, Bryer et al 2021
“Parental Provisioning Drives Brain Size in Birds”, Griesser et al 2021
“Vultures As an Overlooked Model in Cognitive Ecology”, Overveld et al 2021
“Behavioral and Neuronal Representation of Numerosity Zero in the Crow”, Kirschhock et al 2021
“Behavioral and Neuronal Representation of Numerosity Zero in the Crow”
“A Cortex-like Canonical Circuit in the Avian Forebrain”, Stacho et al 2020
“A Neural Correlate of Sensory Consciousness in a Corvid Bird”, Nieder et al 2020
“A neural correlate of sensory consciousness in a corvid bird”
“Birds Do Have a Brain Cortex—and Think: Like Mammals, Birds Have a Pallium That Sustains Correlates of Consciousness”, Herculano-Houzel 2020
“Brainiacs, Not Birdbrains: Crows Possess Higher Intelligence Long Thought a Primarily Human Attribute”, Begley 2020
“Big Brains Stabilize Populations and Facilitate Colonization of Variable Habitats in Birds”, Fristoe et al 2017
“Big brains stabilize populations and facilitate colonization of variable habitats in birds”
“Light Enough to Travel or Wise Enough to Stay? Brain Size Evolution and Migratory Behavior in Birds”, Vincze 2016
“Birds Have Primate-like Numbers of Neurons in the Forebrain”, Olkowicz et al 2016
“Birds have primate-like numbers of neurons in the forebrain”
“Cognition without Cortex”, Güntürkün & Bugnyar 2016
“Neuronal Factors Determining High Intelligence”, Dicke & Roth 2016
“Seasonal Plasticity in the Adult Brain”, Tramontin & Brenowitz 2000
“Seasonal Plasticity in the Song Nuclei of Wild Rufous-sided Towhees”, Smith 1996
“Seasonal plasticity in the song nuclei of wild rufous-sided towhees”
Sort By Magic
Annotations sorted by machine learning into inferred 'tags'. This provides an alternative way to browse: instead of by date order, one can browse in topic order. The 'sorted' list has been automatically clustered into multiple sections & auto-labeled for easier browsing.
Beginning with the newest annotation, it uses the embedding of each annotation to attempt to create a list of nearest-neighbor annotations, creating a progression of topics. For more details, see the link.
brainevolution
aviancognition
avianneurology
Wikipedia
Miscellaneous
Link Bibliography
-
2022-voneugen.pdf
: “Avian Neurons Consume 3× Less Glucose Than Mammalian Neurons”, Kaya von Eugen, Heike Endepols, Alexander Drzezga, Bernd Neumaier, Onur Güntürkün, Heiko Backes, Felix Ströckens -
2022-sol.pdf
: “Neuron Numbers Link Innovativeness With Both Absolute and Relative Brain Size in Birds”, -
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/cne.25298
: “High Associative Neuron Numbers Could Drive Cognitive Performance in Corvid Species”, Felix Ströckens, Kleber Neves, Sina Kirchem, Christine Schwab, Suzana Herculano-Houzel, Onur Güntürkün -
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rstb.2020.0529
: “The Evolution of Quantitative Sensitivity”, -
2021-vanoverveld.pdf
: “Vultures As an Overlooked Model in Cognitive Ecology”, Thijs van Overveld, Daniel Sol, Guillermo Blanco, Antoni Margalida, Manuel de la Riva, José Antonio Donázar -
2020-herculanohouzel.pdf
: “Birds Do Have a Brain Cortex—and Think: Like Mammals, Birds Have a Pallium That Sustains Correlates of Consciousness”, Suzana Herculano-Houzel -
https://www.statnews.com/2020/09/24/crows-possess-higher-intelligence-long-thought-primarily-human/
: “Brainiacs, Not Birdbrains: Crows Possess Higher Intelligence Long Thought a Primarily Human Attribute”, Sharon Begley -
2017-fristoe.pdf
: “Big Brains Stabilize Populations and Facilitate Colonization of Variable Habitats in Birds”, Trevor S. Fristoe, Andrew N. Iwaniuk, Carlos A. Botero -
2016-vincze.pdf
: “Light Enough to Travel or Wise Enough to Stay? Brain Size Evolution and Migratory Behavior in Birds”, Orsolya Vincze -
2016-gunturkun.pdf
: “Cognition without Cortex”, Onur Güntürkün, Thomas Bugnyar