14 research outputs found
Comparative Analysis of Meissner\u27s Corpuscles in the Fingertips of Primates
Meissner\u27s corpuscles (MCs) are tactile mechanoreceptors found in the glabrous skin of primates, including fingertips. These receptors are characterized by sensitivity to light touch, and therefore might be associated with the evolution of manipulative abilities of the hands in primates. We examined MCs in different primate species, including common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus, nâ
=â
5), baboon (Papio anubis, nâ
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2), rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta, nâ
=â
3), chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes, nâ
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3), bonobo (Pan paniscus, nâ
=â
1) and human (Homo sapiens, nâ
=â
8). Fingertips of the first, second and fourth digits were collected from both hands of specimens, dissected and histologically stained using hematoxylin and eosin. The density (MCs per 1â
mm2) and the size (crossâsectional diameter of MCs) were quantified. Overall, there were no differences in the densities of MCs or their size among the digits or between the hands for any species examined. However, MCs varied across species. We found a trend for higher densities of MCs in macaques and humans compared with chimpanzees and bonobos; moreover, apes had larger MCs than monkeys. We further examined whether the density or size of MCs varied as a function of body mass, measures of dexterity and dietary frugivory. Among these variables, only body size accounted for a significant amount of variation in the size of MCs
Human bipedal instability in tree canopy environments is reduced by âlight touchâ fingertip support
Whether tree canopy habitats played a sustained role in the ecology of ancestral bipedal hominins is unresolved. Some argue that arboreal bipedalism was prohibitively risky for hominins whose increasingly modern anatomy prevented them from gripping branches with their feet. Balancing on two legs is indeed challenging for humans under optimal conditions let alone in forest canopy, which is physically and visually highly dynamic. Here we quantify the impact of forest canopy characteristics on postural stability in humans. Viewing a movie of swaying branches while standing on a branch-like bouncy springboard destabilised the participants as much as wearing a blindfold. However âlight touchâ, a sensorimotor feedback strategy based on light fingertip support, significantly enhanced their balance and lowered their thigh muscle activity by up to 30%. This demonstrates how a light touch strategy could have been central to our ancestorâs ability to avoid falls and reduce the mechanical and metabolic cost of arboreal feeding and movement. Our results may also indicate that some adaptations in the hand that facilitated continued access to forest canopy may have complemented, rather than opposed, adaptations that facilitated precise manipulation and tool use
On the positive and negative affective responses to cocaine and their relation to drug self-administration in rats
RATIONALE: Acute cocaine administration produces an initial rewarding state followed by a dysphoric/anxiogenic âcrashâ. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether individual differences in the relative value of cocaineâs positive and negative effects would account for variations in subsequent drug self-administration. METHODS: The dual actions of cocaine were assessed using a conditioned place test (where animals formed preferences for environments paired with the immediate rewarding effects of 1.0 mg/kg i.v. cocaine or aversions of environments associated with the anxiogenic effects present 15 min post-injection) and a runway test (where animals developed approach-avoidance âretreatâ behaviors about entering a goal-box associated with cocaine delivery). Ranked scores from these two tests were then correlated with each other and with the escalation in the operant responding of the same subjects observed over 10 days of 1- or 6-h/day access to i.v. (0.4 mg/inj) cocaine self-administration. RESULTS: a) larger place preferences were associated with faster runway start latencies (r(s)=â0.64), but not with retreat frequency or run times; b) larger place aversions predicted slower runway start times (r(s)=0.62) and increased run times (r(s)=0.65) and retreats (r(s)=0.62); c) response escalation was observed in both the 1-h and 6-h self-administration groups and was associated with increased CPPs (r(s)=0.58) but not CPAs, as well as with faster run times (r(s)=â0.60). CONCLUSIONS: Together, these data suggest that animals exhibiting a greater positive than negative response to acute (single daily injections of) cocaine are at the greatest risk for subsequent escalated cocaine self-administration, a presumed indicator of cocaine addiction