Brain Cells for Socializing
Does an obscure nerve cell help explain what gorillas, elephants, whales—and people—have in common?
- By Ingfei Chen
- Photographs by Aaron Huey
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2009, Subscribe
There was little chance of missing the elephant in the room. About a dozen years after Simba died at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, a half-inch slab of her yellowish, wrinkled, basketball-size brain was laid out before John Allman, a neuroscientist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
Preserved in formaldehyde, it looked like half a pancake, frozen solid on a misting bed of dry ice. Allman carefully sliced it using the laboratory equivalent of a deli meat cutter. Taking well over an hour, he carved off 136 paper-thin sections.
Allman was searching for a peculiar kind of brain cell that he suspects is a key to how the African elephant—like a human being—manages to stay attuned to the ever-shifting nuances of social interplay. These spindle-shaped brain cells, called von Economo neurons—named for the man who first described them—are found only in human beings, great apes and a handful of other notably gregarious creatures. Allman, 66, compares the brains of people and other animals to gain insight into the evolution of human behavior.
"Neuroscience seems really reluctant to approach the question of what it is about our brains that makes us human, and John is doing exactly that," says Todd Preuss, a neuroanatomist and anthropologist at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta. "We know very, very little about how our brains differ from other animals', except that our brains are bigger."
The von Economo neurons are the most striking finding of recent years in comparative brain research, in which scientists tease out fine differences among species. Neuroanatomist Patrick Hof and his colleagues at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in Manhattan first stumbled across the neurons in human brain specimens in 1995, in a region toward the front of the brain called the anterior cingulate cortex. Most neurons have cone- or star-shaped bodies with several branching projections, called dendrites, that receive signals from neighboring cells. But von Economo neurons are thin and elongated, with just one dendrite at each end. They are four times bigger than most other brain cells, and even in species that have the cells, they are rare.
The Manhattan team, it turned out, had rediscovered an obscure cell type first identified in 1881. Hof named the cells after a Vienna-based anatomist, Constantin von Economo, who precisely described the neurons in human brains in 1926; afterward the cells slipped into obscurity. Hof began looking in the brains of deceased primates, including macaque monkeys and great apes—chimps, bonobos, gorillas and orangutans—donated by zoos and sanctuaries. He contacted Allman, who had a collection of primate brains, and asked him to collaborate. In 1999, the scientists reported that all great ape species had von Economo cells, but lesser primates, such as macaques, lemurs and tarsiers, did not. That meant the neurons evolved in a common ancestor of all the great apes about 13 million years ago, after they diverged from other primates but well before the human and chimp lineages diverged about six million years ago.
Although Allman is renowned as a neuroanatomist, it's not surprising to find him delving into larger questions of what it means to be human. His doctorate, from the University of Chicago, was in anthropology, and he has long been fascinated with how the primate brain evolved. He conducted landmark studies with his colleague Jon Kaas, identifying the parts of the owl monkey brain that analyze visual information and make sight possible. In 1974, Allman moved to Caltech, where he studied vision for 25 years. But he also itched to uncover how the basic workings of the human brain shape social behavior. The von Economo neurons immediately captured his interest.
Allman, who is divorced, lives in a 150-year-old brick house in San Marino that he shares with two Australian shepherd dogs, Luna and Lunita. Sepia-toned photographs of his suffragist grandmother hang on the living room wall. Being "notoriously nocturnal," as Allman puts it, he rarely gets to the lab before 1 p.m., leaves in the evening to continue working at home and usually stays up until 2 a.m. His Caltech office is dimly lit by a single window and a small desk lamp; it looks like a cave overrun with books and papers. Down the hall, glass slides of gorilla, bonobo and elephant brain tissue, stained blue and brown, lie drying on tables and counters.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.
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 (18)
+ View All Comments
I wonder if these cells are stimulated by ibogaine or the entactogens such as MDMA. I wonder if people who score high on the Hare psychopathy checklist (estamated 1.5% of general pop.) also show diminished activity in the areas that house these cells. could this lead to a chemical or TCMS treatment for people who lack remorse and empathy? feel free to e-mail me if you know of other realated researches.
Posted by allen anderson on August 28,2011 | 11:43 AM
maybe intelligent people have the von Economo cell but living people I truly believe live with this dementia or better yet allow to let others believe this so by the way they conduct professionalism in their work such as many types of social workers in state jobs like the department of human resources because they are quite dishonest and lazy to facts. just an observance. I really enjoyed this article and will far into the future. Gracious
Posted by tonja rayley on June 18,2011 | 06:24 PM
page 2 completed and if FI control appetite then obese or humans who can't turn off their appetite for possibly many factors.....interesting. I'll possibly be back. Thanx
Posted by tonja rayley on June 18,2011 | 06:07 PM
The great apes are larger then any other type of monkeys so the Von Economo neurons must have some relative to size/mass in which makes life of certain types of life larger than others. AI only read the first page so far but I don't believe we evolved from monkeys at all. At least this is what this story seems to be saying. On to finish the story!
Posted by tonja rayley on June 18,2011 | 05:47 PM
Page 1: "That meant the neurons evolved in a common ancestor of all the great apes about 13 million years ago, after they diverged from other primates but well before the human and chimp lineages diverged about six million years ago."
Page 2: "The cells presumably evolved in now extinct species that gave rise to those marine mammals some 35 million years ago."
Uh, so which is it? If both of these are true then that is some fantastic example of convergent evolution.
Posted by Earth Boy on May 7,2010 | 03:52 PM
Great! I didn't know brain cells were so interesting! :-)
Posted by Katelyn G. on February 2,2010 | 06:29 PM
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 | 12:26 PM
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 | 12:30 PM
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 | 03:50 PM
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 | 01:45 AM
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 | 01:47 AM
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 | 08:43 PM
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 | 06:01 AM
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 | 11:14 PM
+ View All Comments