Inference of ecological and social drivers of human brain-size evolution
- PMID: 29795254
- DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0127-x
Inference of ecological and social drivers of human brain-size evolution
Erratum in
-
Publisher Correction: Inference of ecological and social drivers of human brain-size evolution.Nature. 2018 Sep;561(7723):E32. doi: 10.1038/s41586-018-0305-x. Nature. 2018. PMID: 29955152
-
Author Correction: Inference of ecological and social drivers of human brain-size evolution.Nature. 2019 Mar;567(7746):E4. doi: 10.1038/s41586-019-0950-8. Nature. 2019. PMID: 30792504
Abstract
The human brain is unusually large. It has tripled in size from Australopithecines to modern humans 1 and has become almost six times larger than expected for a placental mammal of human size 2 . Brains incur high metabolic costs 3 and accordingly a long-standing question is why the large human brain has evolved 4 . The leading hypotheses propose benefits of improved cognition for overcoming ecological5-7, social8-10 or cultural11-14 challenges. However, these hypotheses are typically assessed using correlative analyses, and establishing causes for brain-size evolution remains difficult15,16. Here we introduce a metabolic approach that enables causal assessment of social hypotheses for brain-size evolution. Our approach yields quantitative predictions for brain and body size from formalized social hypotheses given empirical estimates of the metabolic costs of the brain. Our model predicts the evolution of adult Homo sapiens-sized brains and bodies when individuals face a combination of 60% ecological, 30% cooperative and 10% between-group competitive challenges, and suggests that between-individual competition has been unimportant for driving human brain-size evolution. Moreover, our model indicates that brain expansion in Homo was driven by ecological rather than social challenges, and was perhaps strongly promoted by culture. Our metabolic approach thus enables causal assessments that refine, refute and unify hypotheses of brain-size evolution.
Comment in
-
Sizing up human brain evolution.Nature. 2018 May;557(7706):496-497. doi: 10.1038/d41586-018-05197-8. Nature. 2018. PMID: 29789743 No abstract available.
References
-
- Klein, R. G. The Human Career. 3rd edn, (Univ. Chicago Press, Chicago, 2009). - DOI
-
- Martin, R. D. Relative brain size and basal metabolic rate in terrestrial vertebrates. Nature 293, 57–60 (1981). - DOI
-
- Aiello, L. C. & Wheeler, P. The expensive-tissue hypothesis: the brain and the digestive system in human and primate evolution. Curr. Anthropol. 36, 199–221 (1995). - DOI
-
- Darwin, C. The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex. (J. Murray, London, 1871).
-
- Clutton-Brock, T. H. & Harvey, P. H. Primates, brains and ecology. J. Zool. 190, 309–323 (1980). - DOI
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
