linkedin post 2020-01-18 09:25:48

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THE WEE PROBLEM. “The assumption that brain size relates to number of neurons in the brain in a similar fashion across orders. This assumption, which was justifiable by the lack of direct estimates of the neuronal composition of the brain of different species, is so widespread that it implicitly or explicitly underlies most comparative studies to date.” https://lnkd.in/d2aUKat View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2020-01-18 09:19:31

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MINE IS BIGGER. “Monkeys, for instance, possess brains that are much smaller than those of ungulates, but the higher cognitive and behavioral flexibility of monkeys over ungulates is anecdotally evident to any observer who compares the ingenious and complex abilities of macaques to those of cows or horses, even though the latter have 4–5× larger brains than macaques.” https://lnkd.in/d2aUKat View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2020-01-18 09:14:18

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THE LADDER OF BEING. “Intelligence has evolved many times independently among vertebrates. Primates, elephants and cetaceans are assumed to be more intelligent than ‘lower’ mammals, the great apes and humans more than monkeys, and humans more than the great apes.” https://lnkd.in/drQAATA View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2020-01-18 09:08:11

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ARE WE ANY DIFFERENT? “What makes us human? Is our brain, the only one known to study other brains, special in any way? According to a recent popular account of what makes us unique, “we have brains that are bigger than expected for an ape, we have a neocortex that is three times bigger than predicted for our body size, we have some areas of the neocortex and the cerebellum that are larger than expected, we have more white matter” – and the list goes on.” https://lnkd.in/d2aUKat View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2020-01-19 06:44:07

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THE SCALING RULES. “Through the estimation of absolute numbers of neuronal and non-neuronal cells in the brains of different mammalian species and their comparison within individual orders, we have been able to determine the scaling rules that apply to the brains of species spanning a wide range of body and brain masses in rodents, primates, and more recently in insectivores.” https://lnkd.in/d2aUKat View in LinkedIn
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