Publications by authors named "Undine SchneeweiSS"

Behavior and innervation suggest a high tactile sensitivity of elephant trunks. To clarify the tactile trunk periphery we studied whiskers with the following findings. Whisker density is high at the trunk tip and African savanna elephants have more trunk tip whiskers than Asian elephants.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study found that elephants have a high number of facial motor control neurons, with African elephants having more than Asian elephants, particularly in areas controlling ear movement.
  • It was noted that the structure of these neurons, including their size and organization, appears adapted to their trunk usage methods, with larger distal neurons serving the trunk tip.
  • The research suggests that the differences in neuronal organization between African and Asian elephants correspond to their distinct trunk manipulation strategies: African elephants use two "fingers" to pinch, while Asian elephants generally wrap their trunk around objects.
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Sensory nerves are information bottlenecks giving rise to distinct sensory worlds across animal species. Here, we investigate trigeminal ganglion and sensory nerves of elephants. The elephant trigeminal ganglion is very large.

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Physiological studies of the last century mapped a somatosensory cortical gyrus representing the pig's rostrum. Here, we describe the extraordinary correspondence of this gyrus to the rostrum. The pig rostrum is packed with microvibrissae (~470 per hemi-rostrum) and innervated by a prominent infraorbital nerve, containing about 80,000 axons.

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The cortex of mammalian brains is parcellated into distinct substructures or modules. Cortical modules typically lie parallel to the cortical sheet, and can be delineated by certain histochemical and immunohistochemical methods. In this study, we highlight a method to isolate the cortex from mammalian brains and flatten them to obtain sections parallel to the cortical sheet.

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