Dominance of the cerebrum
Ascending the vertebrate scale, the cerebral hemispheres become more and more important as association centres. The cerebral hemispheres begin their development as paired outgrowths of the forebrain and serve as centres of olfactory reception. In the older vertebrates the forebrain is divided into the olfactory bulb—where the olfactory nerve fibres end—and the cerebral hemisphere. The hemisphere at this time, referred to as the paleopallium, is merely an olfactory lobe serving as an association area for olfactory impulses. The olfactory lobes are prominent in animals such as amphibians, but in birds and primates in which the sense of smell is less important the lobes are reduced in extent. In amphibians the hemispheres consist of three parts: the paleopallium (olfactory lobe), the archipallium, and the basal nuclei. All three areas receive olfactory stimuli and discharge impulses to the brainstem. The archipallium is a correlation centre and a forerunner of the mammalian hippocampus. The basal nuclei are equivalent to the corpus striatum and function as association areas with connections to the thalamus. In primitive reptiles the basal nuclei have moved to the inner part of the hemisphere, whereas the other areas of gray matter have moved toward the surface. In advanced reptiles a new association centre, the neopallium, appears between paleopallium and archipallium. In birds there is nothing corresponding to the neopallium, but the basal ganglia (that is, the corpus striatum) are enormously expanded. In mammals the neopallium becomes greatly enlarged, exceeding all the other parts of the brain in size. This region assumes more and more of the higher types of neural activity in correlation, association, and learning. At first the neopallium expands to envelop the other brain structures. The archipallium becomes folded into a small area on the median part of the hemispheres, where it remains as the hippocampus. The paleopallium (olfactory lobes) constitutes a small ventral region on the hemisphere, the pyriform lobe. The corpus striatum (old basal nuclei) becomes a central part of the hemisphere. Further expansion of the neopallium in primates and humans causes extensive folding and results in a very convoluted surface of the brain.
Thomas L. Lentz Solomon D. Erulkar