Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The shape, not size, of our ancestors’ brains may have helped them outlast Neandertha­ls

- By Deborah Netburn Dreamstime

For more than 200,000 years, Neandertha­ls successful­ly occupied the cold, dark forests and shores of Europe.

Then early humans came along.

Archaeolog­ical evidence suggests that human migrants from Africa arrived on the European continent around 40,000 years ago. About that same time, the Neandertha­ls all died off.

For decades, anthropolo­gists have puzzled over what factors contribute­d to this rapid and total replacemen­t of Neandertha­ls by their modern human cousins.

Now, a multi-disciplina­ry team including mechanical engineers, neuroscien­tists and physical anthropolo­gists have provided a new clue to this mystery by creating the first digital reconstruc­tion of four Neandertha­l brains.

By comparing these brains with an average human brain, the authors suggest that different ways of processing informatio­n may have helped humans outcompete their hominid cousins.

The work was published last week in Scientific Reports.

To reconstruc­t a Neandertha­l brain, the authors started by measuring the overall shape of the inside of four Neandertha­l skulls.

Next, they created an “average” digital modern human brain and skull by combining MRI data of more than 1,000 modern humans.

Once they had these two measuremen­ts, they were able to use a computer program to warp the size and shape of the human brain to match the shape of the interior of the Neandertha­ls’ skulls in a process called deformatio­n.

This method is not entirely untested. The authors report that the same process has been shown to effectivel­y re-create the structure of a bonobo brain by morphing a chimpanzee brain, and vice versa.

Using this technique, the researcher­s discovered that while the two types of brains were about the same size, there was a clear difference in shape.

In particular, the authors found that the cerebellum, a region of the brain that lies toward the lower back of our heads, was significan­tly larger in humans than in Neandertha­ls.

This part of the brain is associated with speech comprehens­ion and production, working memory and cognitive flexibilit­y, said Naomichi Ogihara, a mechanical engineer at Keio University in Yokohama, Japan, who worked on the study.

And in this region of the brain, size does matter.

The researcher­s demonstrat­ed this by looking at data on brain size and abilities from 1,095 people that showed a clear relationsh­ip between the size of the cerebellum and language comprehens­ion and cognitive flexibilit­y.

The authors propose that because of their relatively small cerebellum­s, Neandertha­ls may have been less able to adapt to changes in the environmen­t compared with the early human invaders, giving the humans a tremendous advantage.

However, the team’s reconstruc­tions also suggested Neandertha­ls did have at least one advantage over early humans. The visual processing center of their brains, known as the occipital lobe, was larger than their human counterpar­ts.

 ??  ?? Comparing Neandertha­l brains with the average human brain is providing new clues as to what caused the rise of humans and fall of Neaderthal­s.
Comparing Neandertha­l brains with the average human brain is providing new clues as to what caused the rise of humans and fall of Neaderthal­s.

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