articleAnnals of Human BiologyJan 1, 2009Closed access

The social brain hypothesis and its implications for social evolution

Oxford BioMedica (United Kingdom) · University of Oxford

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Abstract

The social brain hypothesis was proposed as an explanation for the fact that primates have unusually large brains for body size compared to all other vertebrates: Primates evolved large brains to manage their unusually complex social systems. Although this proposal has been generalized to all vertebrate taxa as an explanation for brain evolution, recent analyses suggest that the social brain hypothesis takes a very different form in other mammals and birds than it does in anthropoid primates. In primates, there is a quantitative relationship between brain size and social group size (group size is a monotonic function of brain size), presumably because the cognitive demands of sociality place a constraint on…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Sociality
  • Brain size
  • Biology
  • Social complexity
  • Vertebrate
  • Social group
  • Social organization
  • Social animal
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