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Evolutionary Convergence as a Tool in Neuroscience: 13th Annual Karger Workshop, San Diego, Calif., November 2001 (Brain, Behaviour & Evolution)

$45.00
Author: H.L. Eisthen

Publisher: S. Karger

Paperback:
ISBN 10: 3805574819
ISBN 13: 978-3805574815

Special Topic Issue: Brain, Behavior and Evolution 2002, Vol. 59, No. 5-6 Convergence (homoplasy) is a complex and important topic that spans taxa, levels of analysis, and approaches to studying the nervous system, and has been the subject of much recent interest in evolutionary biology. We urge comparative neurobiologists not simply to view convergence as 'noise' that complicates analyses of homology, but to consider the heuristic value of convergence in helping us understand the diversity of structure and function in the nervous system. A close examination on instances of evolutionary convergence can provide a wealth of information concerning processing strategies used by the nervous system, as well as constraints on neural architecture. In this volume, the authors consider examples of convergence at the level of molecules, physiology, anatomy, and behavior. These papers highlight features of the nervous system that are associated repeatedly with specialized functions, suggesting mechanisms by which the nervous system processes information and produces behavior.