NEURO/IA: "Brain Not Evolving Any Time Soon"

From: Mitchell Porter (mitch@thehub.com.au)
Date: Mon Jan 27 1997 - 21:08:29 MST


This article comes from the Health section of Yahoo's Reuters pages
(January 27; articles there lapse after a week).

-mitch
http://www.thehub.com.au/~mitch

Brain Not Evolving Any Time Soon

   NEW YORK (Reuters) -- If you've ever struggled through a physics class
   or tried to master differential equations, you may be disappointed to
   find out that humans won't be getting any smarter any time soon.
                                       
   The brain has reached -- or is very close to -- its maximum potential
   in terms of the evolution of intelligence, according to a report in
   New Scientist.

   "There is no incremental improvement path available to the brain,
   which makes evolution difficult," stated researcher Chris Winter in
   the article.
                                         
   Peter Cochrane, Winter and colleagues at the Advanced Applications and
   Technologies section of BT Laboratories in Ipswich, England, looked at
   various brain models to determine how the organ could evolve to
   process more information, or to do so more rapidly. They found that
   the brain could get bigger if the heart evolved to pump more blood to
   supply the additional tissue with oxygen and nutrients.
                    
   However, this rapidly turns into a 'chicken and egg' situation -- the
   axons of nerves in a bigger brain would need to be wider to process
   information more rapidly. Therefore, each nerve axon would need more
   insulation and a greater blood supply -- leaving less room for a
   greater overall number of nerves. So the bigger the nerves, the
   greater the blood supply they need, the more blood vessels they
   require, the less room there is for bigger nerves....
                 
   While brain size is considered a relatively poor indicator of
   intelligence, the number of nerves and their connections is important.
   Dolphins and whales are the only animals that even come close to the
   number of nerves and nerve connections found in the human brain.
                                         
   And if the brain was larger, nerve signals would also have farther to
   travel from one area of the brain to another, possibly limiting its
   efficiency as well as any advances in processing power, according to
   the article.
                                                                        
   Because of the delicate balance between the size and number of nerves
   and the blood needed to nourish them, the brain is now at its maximum
   capacity -- or at least within 20% of capacity -- in terms of
   intelligence, the researchers concluded.
                                                                        
   However, new structures may evolve in the brain or existing structures
   may specialize in ways that increase intelligence, noted Dr. Robert
   Barton, a lecturer in biological anthropology at the University of
   Durham in the U.K.
                 
   "They assume that processing information involves the whole brain, and
   that is not necessarily the case," he said in the article. SOURCE: New
   Scientist (January 25, 1997)



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