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Studying avian encephalization with geometric morphometrics
Author(s) -
MarugánLobón Jesús,
Watanabe Akinobu,
Kawabe Soichiro
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of anatomy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.932
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1469-7580
pISSN - 0021-8782
DOI - 10.1111/joa.12476
Subject(s) - encephalization , allometry , brain size , morphometrics , biology , brain morphometry , evolutionary biology , zoology , ecology , medicine , magnetic resonance imaging , radiology
Encephalization is a core concept in comparative neurobiology, aiming to quantify the neurological capacity of organisms. For measuring encephalization, many studies have employed relative brain sizes corrected for expected allometric scaling to body size. Here we highlight the utility of a multivariate geometric morphometric ( GM ) approach for visualizing and analyzing neuroanatomical shape variation associated with encephalization. GM readily allows the statistical evaluation of covariates, such as size, and many software tools exist for visualizing their effects on shape. Thus far, however, studies using GM have not attempted to translate the meaning of encephalization to shape data. As such, we tested the statistical relationship between size and encephalization quotients ( EQ s) to brain shape utilizing a broad interspecific sample of avian endocranial data. Although statistically significant, the analyses indicate that allometry accounts for <10% of total neuroanatomical shape variation. Notably, we find that EQ s, despite being corrected for allometric scaling based on size, contain size‐related neuroanatomical shape changes. In addition, much of what is traditionally considered encephalization comprises clade‐specific trends in relative forebrain expansion, particularly driven by landbirds. EQ s, therefore, fail to capture 90% of the total neuroanatomical variation after correcting for allometry and shared phylogenetic history. Moving forward, GM techniques provide crucial tools for investigating key drivers of this vast, largely unexplored aspect of avian brain morphology.