• Brains grew faster as humans evolved, study finds

    From Primum Sapienti@invalide@invalid.invalid to sci.anthropology.paleo on Wed Nov 27 23:36:17 2024
    From Newsgroup: sci.anthropology.paleo


    https://phys.org/news/2024-11-brains-grew-faster-humans-evolved.html

    Modern humans, Neanderthals, and other
    recent relatives on our human family tree
    evolved bigger brains much more rapidly
    than earlier species, a new study of
    human brain evolution has found.

    Scientists from the University of Reading,
    the University of Oxford and Durham
    University found that brain size increased
    gradually within each ancient human
    species rather than through sudden leaps
    between species. The research, published
    November 26 in the Proceedings of the
    National Academy of Sciences, overturns
    long-standing ideas about human brain
    evolution.

    The team assembled the largest-ever
    dataset of ancient human fossils spanning
    7 million years and used advanced
    computational and statistical methods to
    account for gaps in the fossil record.
    These innovative approaches provided the
    most comprehensive view yet of how brain
    size evolved over time.
    ...


    https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2409542121
    Hominin brain size increase has emerged
    from within-species encephalization

    Significance
    Our study significantly advances our
    comprehension of human brain evolution by
    employing a unique approach to dissect
    changes in brain size throughout the
    complete fossil record of hominins. By
    disentangling the dynamics of brain size
    change that occur within species from
    those occurring across species, we unveil
    that increases in brain size primarily
    occurred within the lineages comprising a
    single species. Such a pattern gives rise
    to the overall brain expansion that
    scientists herald as a trademark of
    modern humanity. Furthermore, we reveal
    a trend of accelerating brain size growth
    in more recent lineages. This nuanced
    understanding deepens our insight into
    the evolutionary trajectory of human
    cognition and behavior, crucial for
    unraveling the complexities of our
    speciesrCO unique traits.

    Abstract
    The fact that rapid brain size increase was
    clearly a key aspect of human evolution has
    prompted many studies focusing on this
    phenomenon, and many suggestions as to the
    underlying evolutionary patterns and
    processes. No study to date has however
    separated out the contributions of change
    through time within vs. between hominin
    species while simultaneously incorporating
    effects of body size. Using a phylogenetic
    approach never applied before to
    paleoanthropological data, we show that
    relative brain size increase across ~7 My
    of hominin evolution arose from increases
    within individual species which account
    for an observed overall increase in
    relative brain size. Variation among
    species in brain size after accounting
    for this effect is associated with body
    mass differences but not time. In addition,
    our analysis also reveals that the
    within-species trend escalated in more
    recent lineages, implying an overall
    pattern of accelerating relative brain
    size increase through time.



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