The information represented in the primate hippocampus is being analysed by making recordings in monkeys actively walking in the laboratory. In a sample of 352 cells recorded in this situation, no ''place'' cells have so far been found. Instead, we have found a considerable population of ''spatial v
Primate longevity: Its place in the mammalian scheme
β Scribed by Steven N. Austad; Kathleen E. Fischer
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 795 KB
- Volume
- 28
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0275-2565
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Data on captive longevity in 587 mammalian species were analyzed in order to evaluate primate longevity in the context of general mammalian life history patterns. Contrary to some recurrent claims in the literature, we found that 1) primates are not the longest-lived mammalian order, either by absolute longevity, longevity corrected for body size, or metabolic expenditure per lifetime; 2) although relative brain size is highly correlated with longevity in primates, this is an aberrant trend for mammals in general, and other body organs account for an even greater amount of variation in longevity; and 3) there has been no progressive evolution of increased longevity among the primate superfamilies. The exceptional magnitude of primate longevity may, in keeping with evolutionary senescence theory, be due to an evolutionary history of low vulnerability to environmentally imposed death due to their body size, arboreal habit, and propensity to live in social groups.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The following editorial review by Dr. Froehlich is an outgrowth of his response to Kimbel and Martin's book. However, it is not a book review: rather, it is a lucid presentation of his views on the concepts of
## Abstract Facial expression is a mode of closeβproximity nonβvocal communication used by primates and is produced by mimetic/facial musculature. Arguably, primates make the mostβintricate facial displays and have some of the mostβcomplex facial musculature of all mammals. Most of the earlier idea