VLIZ
VLAAMS INSTITUUT VOOR DE ZEE
MARIEN EN KUSTGEBONDEN ONDERZOEK & BELEID IN VLAANDEREN
   
© VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ © VLIZ
 
 
  English  Sitemap  Print
U bent hier: VLIZ > datacentrum
menu1 Over het VLIZ menu2 Infoloket menu3 Zeebibliotheek menu4 Cijfers&Beleid menu5 Faciliteiten menu6 Datacentrum
   
Datacentrum
  - IMIS: Integrated Marine Information System -
log in

Personen | Instituten | Publicaties | Projecten | Datasets | Kaarten
meld een fout in dit recordmandje (0): toevoegen | tonen Print-vriendelijke versie

On the origin of the nervous systemPeer reviewed article
Miller, G. (2009). On the origin of the nervous system Science (Wash.) 325(5936): 24-26
In: Science (Washington). American Association for the Advancement of Science: Washington DC. ISSN 0036-8075, meer

Beschikbaar in Auteur 

Trefwoord
    Marien

Auteur  Top 

Abstract
    Peering back through the ages for a glimpse of the first nervous systems is no easy trick. In the seventh essay in Science's series in honor of the Year of Darwin, Greg Miller discusses some tantalizing clues that scientists have recently gained about the evolutionary origins of nervous systems. They've found that some of the key molecular building blocks of neurons predate even the first multicellular organisms. By looking down the tree of life, they are concluding that assembling these components into a cell a modern neuroscientist would recognize as a neuron probably happened very early in animal evolution, more than 600 million years ago. Most scientists agree that circuits of interconnected neurons probably arose soon thereafter, first as diffuse webs and later as a centralized brain and nerves. But the resolution on this picture is fuzzy. The order in which early branches split off the animal tree of life is controversial, and different arrangements imply different story lines for the origins and early evolution of nervous systems. Scientists also disagree on which animals were the first to have a centralized nervous system and how many times neurons and nervous systems evolved independently.

 Top | Auteur 
 

 

Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee
InnovOcean site
Wandelaarkaai 7
B-8400 OOSTENDE, België
Tel: +32 [0]59/34 21 30
Fax: +32 [0]59/34 21 31
Email: info@vliz.be
   

 

Vlaamse Gemeenschap Provincie West-Vlaanderen