作者
Jeroen B Smaers, Ryan S Rothman, Daphne R Hudson, Amy M Balanoff, Brian Beatty, Dina KN Dechmann, Dorien de Vries, Jacob C Dunn, John G Fleagle, Christopher C Gilbert, Anjali Goswami, Andrew N Iwaniuk, William L Jungers, Max Kerney, Daniel T Ksepka, Paul R Manger, Carrie S Mongle, F James Rohlf, N Adam Smith, Christophe Soligo, Vera Weisbecker, Kamran Safi
发表日期
2021/4/28
期刊
Science Advances
卷号
7
期号
18
页码范围
eabe2101
出版商
American Association for the Advancement of Science
简介
Relative brain size has long been considered a reflection of cognitive capacities and has played a fundamental role in developing core theories in the life sciences. Yet, the notion that relative brain size validly represents selection on brain size relies on the untested assumptions that brain-body allometry is restrained to a stable scaling relationship across species and that any deviation from this slope is due to selection on brain size. Using the largest fossil and extant dataset yet assembled, we find that shifts in allometric slope underpin major transitions in mammalian evolution and are often primarily characterized by marked changes in body size. Our results reveal that the largest-brained mammals achieved large relative brain sizes by highly divergent paths. These findings prompt a reevaluation of the traditional paradigm of relative brain size and open new opportunities to improve our understanding of the …
引用总数
学术搜索中的文章
JB Smaers, RS Rothman, DR Hudson, AM Balanoff… - Science Advances, 2021