National Post (National Edition)

The Big Brain Theory

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Did our ancestors need more brainpower to cope with the environmen­t, such as finding and storing food? Or was it driven more by the social complexiti­es of dealing with their peers? Or was it all about the challenge of learning and teaching cultural knowledge? A new study in the journal Nature tried to find out.

WHY DO WE HAVE SUCH BIG BRAINS?

In relation to body size, our brains are huge, about six times larger than one would expect from other mammals. And this three-pound organ sucks up fully 20 per cent of the body’s energy needs. Evolutiona­ry theory says to build and maintain something that costly, there must have been a very good reason.

CAN A COMPUTER HELP FIND THE ANSWER?

Mauricio Gonzalez-forero and Andy Gardner of St. Andrews University in Scotland turned to computer simulation­s to find out. The researcher­s created a hypothetic­al population of females, focusing on just one sex for simplicity, and followed them as they faced the challenges of living. The researcher­s plugged in data on things like a newborn’s brain size and the energy costs of the brain and reproducti­ve organs. And they simulated tasks that resemble the environmen­tal and social challenges included in theories about brain evolution.

SO WHAT DID THE COMPUTER DO?

It pondered how the pressures of each challenge might affect changes of brain size over time. Drawing on evolutiona­ry theory, it calculated how much energy the females would be expected to invest in growing the brain versus other tissues under the different challenges. It found that stronger mental demands tended to produce bigger brains.

AND THE ANSWER?

The computer said about 60 per cent of the effect on boosting brain size came from an individual dealing with the environmen­t on one’s own, as in finding, storing and cooking food, and making stone tools. Another 30 per cent came from co-operating to deal with the environmen­t, such as banding together to hunt. The final 10 per cent from competitio­n between groups of people. While the study didn’t specifical­ly look at the impact of cultural tasks, it gave evidence of a substantia­l influence from them, too, Gonzalez-forero said. He plans to assess cultural factors in the future. He accepted the results are not intended to be the final word, but rather an encouragem­ent for other researcher­s to use computer simulation for studying the question of brain size.

AND THE CRITICS?

Dean Falk, a brain-evolution expert at Florida State University, said the work doesn’t assess the long-standing hypothesis that the developmen­t of language may have driven expansion of the brain. Gonzalez-forero said the language idea is to some extent part of the cultural factors that remain to be addressed. And Robin Dunbar, a professor of evolutiona­ry psychology at Oxford University, and paleoanthr­opologist Richard Potts of the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n said they didn’t think the simulation adequately mimicked the lives our ancestors lived.

 ?? OSCAR G. MASON / J.C. DALTON / PHILADELPH­IA, LEA ??
OSCAR G. MASON / J.C. DALTON / PHILADELPH­IA, LEA

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