The remarkable, yet not extraordinary, human brain as a scaled-up primate brain and its associated cost
Instituto Nacional de Ciência e Tecnologia de Neurociência Translacional
Abstract
Neuroscientists have become used to a number of "facts" about the human brain: It has 100 billion neurons and 10- to 50-fold more glial cells; it is the largest-than-expected for its body among primates and mammals in general, and therefore the most cognitively able; it consumes an outstanding 20% of the total body energy budget despite representing only 2% of body mass because of an increased metabolic need of its neurons; and it is endowed with an overdeveloped cerebral cortex, the largest compared with brain size. These facts led to the widespread notion that the human brain is literally extraordinary: an outlier among mammalian brains, defying evolutionary rules that apply to other species, with a…
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- References
- 102
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Neuroscience
- Human brain
- Primate
- Cognition
- Biology
- Cerebral cortex
- Cortex (anatomy)
- Brain size