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From von Economo's work, Allman learned that the unusual cells seemed to reside only in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and one other niche of the human brain, the frontal insula (FI). Brain-scanning studies have established that the ACC and FI are particularly active when people experience emotion. Both areas also seem to be important for "self-monitoring," such as noticing bodily sensations of pain and hunger or recognizing that one has made a mistake. The ACC seems broadly involved in nearly every mental or physical effort.
By contrast, the frontal insula may play a more specific role in generating social emotions such as empathy, trust, guilt, embarrassment, love—even a sense of humor. According to experiments that measure the workings of various brain regions, the area becomes active when a mother hears a crying baby, for instance, or when someone scrutinizes a face to determine the other person's intentions. The FI is where the brain monitors and reacts to "gut feelings" from bodily sensations or interactions within a social network, Allman says. It's the link between self-monitoring and awareness of others that makes it possible for us to understand the feelings of other people. "The basic proposition that I'm advancing," he says, "is the notion that self-awareness and social awareness are part of the same functioning, and the von Economo cells are part of that."
Allman thinks that the neurons expedite communication from the ACC and FI to the rest of the brain. The cells are unusually large, and in the nervous system, size often correlates with speed. "They're big neurons, which I think do a very fast read of something and then relay that information elsewhere quickly," he says. He speculates that as our primate ancestors evolved bigger and bigger brains, they needed high-speed connections to send messages across greater distances. "Large brain size necessarily carries with it a slowing down of communication within the brain," he adds. "So one way of dealing with that is to have a few specialized populations of cells that are pretty fast."
Given that the neurons live in the brain's social hot spots, Allman theorizes that the von Economo cell system allows a rapid, intuitive read on emotionally charged, volatile situations. The neurons "would enable one to quickly adjust to changing social contexts," he speculates. In the ancient past, this neural wiring might have conferred a survival edge to our ancestors by enabling them to make accurate, split-second judgments, especially about whom they could trust or not.
Allman, Hof and their colleagues have looked for von Economo neurons in more than 100 animal species, from sloths to platypuses. Only a few of them, other than primates and elephants, are known to have the cells: humpback whales, sperm whales, fin whales, orcas and bottle-nosed dolphins. The cells presumably evolved in now extinct species that gave rise to those marine mammals some 35 million years ago.
As I watched him section the elephant brain at Caltech, Allman, with colleagues Atiya Hakeem and Virginie Goubert, finally reached the FI of Simba's left hemisphere. Three days later, microscope examination of the brain slices revealed it to be dotted with the distinctive spindle-shaped cells. That confirmed their previous sighting of similar neurons in the FI of Simba's right hemisphere. The elephant cells are larger than human and primate ones, about the size of whale neurons, but the size and shape are unmistakably von Economo neurons.
From counting the von Economo cells in 16 slides—an eye-glazing chore—Hakeem and Allman estimate that there are roughly 10,000 of them in the postage-stamp-size FI on the right side of the elephant brain, or about 0.8 percent of the FI's 1.3 million neurons. Von Economo neurons are more plentiful in the human FI, averaging about 193,000 cells and accounting for about 1.25 percent of all neurons there. In absolute numbers, the human brain has roughly half a million von Economo neurons, far more than the brains of elephants, whales or great apes. Allman and his colleagues have found none in the elephant's closest kin: the anteater, armadillo and rock hyrax. The cells' absence in these species supports Allman's theory that the neurons are a feature of big brains.
Allman speculates that such cells readily evolve from a small set of neurons in the insular cortex that are found in all mammals and regulate appetite. He thinks that while von Economo cells likely evolved to speed information around a big brain, they got co-opted by the demands of social interactions. If he's right, smart, social animals such as whales and elephants might have the same specialized wiring for empathy and social intelligence as human beings.
Related topics: Behavior Brain Biology Psychology Schools and Universities
Additional Sources
"A neuronal morphologic type unique to humans and great apes," Esther A. Nimchinsky et al., PNAS, April 27, 1999.
"Von Economo Neurons in the Elephant Brain," Atiya Y. Hakeem et al., The Anatomical Record, December 16, 2008.


Comments
Any work done on dogs? That species is very social and seems to be particularily adept at reading body language.
Posted by Mary J on May 21,2009 | 05:30AM
I'll take my dog, it's friendship, and its brain over several people I know as I wonder if they any social cells at all in their brains.
Posted by Chris L on May 21,2009 | 07:22AM
Wow! Who funds such fascinating work?
Posted by J. Bruer on May 22,2009 | 08:13AM
Incredible! Are these found in social insects, I wonder? Or only in large-brained social mammals?
Posted by M. Kalin on May 23,2009 | 02:01PM
Given the social difficulities people with autism have, I am surprised it was not mentioned in this article.
Posted by J. Smith on May 27,2009 | 08:14PM
My oldest son (adopted) has been diagnosed with Tourette's syndrome, and displays significant Oppositional Defiant Disorder tho neuropsychologists have declined to diagnose ODD. There are strong indications our son had fetal alcohol exposure but testing only places him as very mildly affected. Still, life is a daily challenge and some days he can be violent or erratic and he struggles to connect cause and effect relationships. He doesn't seem to have much capacity for empathy or remorse.
Reading this article, particularly regarding the research on the degenerative, frontotemporal dementia has elements of behavior we see in our boy. It makes me wonder if any FASD or Tourettes researchers are following the research described here? Are Allman or Seeley interested in examining FASD or Tourettes affected brains for Economo neurons? I hope they do. Seems like it would be very worth a look.
Here in Alaska, FASD is a very prevalent problem. Any research that can shed light on how to work with people so affected would be a big help.
Posted by Dan Dunaway on May 31,2009 | 03:01AM
Any established link between these neurons and the mirror neurons described by UCLA's neuroscientist Marco Iacoboni in his book "Mirroring People: The New Science of How We Connect with Others" ?
Posted by Britton Johnston on June 1,2009 | 05:43PM
Echoing B. Johnston's question, I'm immediately wondering about the crossover to the mirror neuron system - which has been identified in nearly all social mammals studied thus far. Though I'd cite Ramachandran as the researcher to do the most to identify and map the central importance of the mirror neuron architectural topology and its relationship to emotional empathy. His work has been completely groundbreaking, in many regards.
Incidentally, what's up with this "higher" and "lower" primate classification system? Is there some Platonic scale on which sentient beings are placed, or is this just some weird linguistic throwback to the days when humanity placed itself at the "top" of evolution and everything else was "lesser" in comparison.
We've cross-posted this article, with full attribution, in our discussion space - hopefully nobody has a (virtual) cow about that:
http://cultureghost.org/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=2388&p=4482
Regards,
Fausty | www.cultureghost.org
Posted by Fausty on June 4,2009 | 10:47PM
Fascinating and hopeful research in shedding light on poor social functioning. What about the brains of adolescents, particularly boys? One would expect those with poorer functioning to have fewer von Economo cells perhaps. What about addicts? Any difference there? Any difference in the different addictive substances or activities chosen?
Posted by Victoria von Witt on June 12,2009 | 10:45PM
Fascinating research! Does anyone know where I can find the documentary about the African elephants that adopted the orphaned calf? I'd like to use it for my class.
Posted by J Conti on July 17,2009 | 12:50PM
Does anyone find this information heartbreaking? Does this not make you think of all the greater apes locked up in cages and experimented on, or in zoos where their friends are taken from them? How about elephants in circuses? How awful to think that these beings are emotionally and physically tortured by us, by humans, just because we believe they do not feel emotion or understand acts of kindness versus acts of hate or worse, indifference. This kind of research, trying to find out what makes us human, is desperately needed, but not to differentiate us from the "others", but rather to help us see how much we are the same.
Posted by Nicky on August 8,2009 | 09:30AM
I wonder if there is any difference in the amount of Von Economo neurons in women and men. Women are generally considered to be more adept at social functions and empathy than men, so it would stand to reason that women would have a higher percentage of VENs than men.
Posted by Katelyn on September 22,2009 | 09:26AM