Not exact matches
Research points to the possibility of such a
center in humans: functional
imaging has already shown that the human amygdala — like the bat's amygdala — responds to
species - specific emotive sounds, such as laughing and crying, Kanwal says.
The researchers used high - resolution X-ray computed tomography (CT) at the Museum's Microscopy and
Imaging Facility, the National Museum of Natural History in Paris, and the Biomaterials Science
Center of the University of Basel in Switzerland to scan the skulls of 21 felid specimens, including seven modern cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) from distinct populations, a closely related extinct cheetah (Acinonyx pardinensis) that lived in the Pleistocene between about 2.6 million and 126,000 years ago, and more than a dozen other living felid
species.
The Veterinary
Center offers state - of - the - art, non-invasive
imaging services for the diagnostic evaluation of the internal organs, the skeleton, the brain, heart, teeth, and blood vessels in every
species we treat.