Publication | Open Access
Neanderthal brain size at birth provides insights into the evolution of human life history
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Citations
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2008
Year
Brain DevelopmentDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceNeurodevelopmentNeanderthal Brain SizeComparative AnatomyPrimate SystematicsSocial SciencesBrain GrowthVirtual ReconstructionsHuman OriginHuman Brain DevelopmentHuman Life HistoryLife History TheoryAllometric StudyPaleoanthropologyPrimate FossilLife HistoryCraniofacial GrowthHuman EvolutionDevelopmental BiologyNeuroanatomyEvolutionary BiologyHomo ErectusOntogenyEvolutionary AnatomyNeuroscienceAnthropologyMedicine
Human brains grow 3.3× from birth to adulthood, far exceeding the 2.5× expansion seen in chimpanzees, yet how this extra growth is achieved and its implications for life history and cognition remain debated due to limited fossil evidence and uncertainty about when the modern human pattern evolved.
From birth to adulthood, the human brain expands by a factor of 3.3, compared with 2.5 in chimpanzees [DeSilva J and Lesnik J (2006) Chimpanzee neonatal brain size: Implications for brain growth in Homo erectus. J Hum Evol 51: 207-212]. How the required extra amount of human brain growth is achieved and what its implications are for human life history and cognitive development are still a matter of debate. Likewise, because comparative fossil evidence is scarce, when and how the modern human pattern of brain growth arose during evolution is largely unknown. Virtual reconstructions of a Neanderthal neonate from Mezmaiskaya Cave (Russia) and of two Neanderthal infant skeletons from Dederiyeh Cave (Syria) now provide new comparative insights: Neanderthal brain size at birth was similar to that in recent Homo sapiens and most likely subject to similar obstetric constraints. Neanderthal brain growth rates during early infancy were higher, however. This pattern of growth resulted in larger adult brain sizes but not in earlier completion of brain growth. Because large brains growing at high rates require large, late-maturing, mothers [Leigh SR and Blomquist GE (2007) in Campbell CJ et al. Primates in perspective; pp 396-407], it is likely that Neanderthal life history was similarly slow, or even slower-paced, than in recent H. sapiens.
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