Evolution of brain and culture: the neurological and cognitive journey from Australopithecus to Albert Einstein.

D. Falk
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引用次数: 26

Abstract

Fossil and comparative primatological evidence suggest that alterations in the development of prehistoric hominin infants kindled three consecutive evolutionary-developmental (evo-devo) trends that, ultimately, paved the way for the evolution of the human brain and cognition. In the earliest trend, infants' development of posture and locomotion became delayed because of anatomical changes that accompanied the prolonged evolution of bipedalism. Because modern humans have inherited these changes, our babies are much slower than other primates to reach developmental milestones such as standing, crawling, and walking. The delay in ancestral babies' physical development eventually precipitated an evolutionary reversal in which they became increasing unable to cling independently to their mothers. For the first time in prehistory, babies were, thus, periodically deprived of direct physical contact with their mothers. This prompted the emergence of a second evo-devo trend in which infants sought contact comfort from caregivers using evolved signals, including new ways of crying that are conserved in modern babies. Such signaling stimulated intense reciprocal interactions between prehistoric mothers and infants that seeded the eventual emergence of motherese and, subsequently, protolanguage. The third trend was for an extreme acceleration in brain growth that began prior to the last trimester of gestation and continued through infants' first postnatal year (early "brain spurt"). Conservation of this trend in modern babies explains why human brains reach adult sizes that are over three times those of chimpanzees. The fossil record of hominin cranial capacities together with comparative neuroanatomical data suggest that, around 3 million years ago, early brain spurts began to facilitate an evolutionary trajectory for increasingly large adult brains in association with neurological reorganization. The prehistoric increase in brain size eventually caused parturition to become exceedingly difficult, and this difficulty, known as the "obstetrical dilemma", is likely to constrain the future evolution of brain size and, thus, privilege ongoing evolution in neurological reorganization. In modern babies, the brain spurt is accompanied by formation and tuning (pruning) of neurological connections, and development of dynamic higher-order networks that facilitate acquisition of grammatical language and, later in development, other advanced computational abilities such as musical or mathematical perception and performance. The cumulative evidence suggests that the emergence and refinement of grammatical language was a prime mover of hominin brain evolution.
脑与文化的进化:从南方古猿到阿尔伯特·爱因斯坦的神经学和认知之旅。
化石和比较灵长类学证据表明,史前古人类婴儿发育的变化引发了三个连续的进化-发育趋势,最终为人类大脑和认知的进化铺平了道路。在最早的趋势中,婴儿的姿势和运动的发展由于解剖学的变化而延迟,这伴随着两足动物的长期进化。由于现代人类继承了这些变化,我们的婴儿在达到站立、爬行和行走等发育里程碑方面比其他灵长类动物要慢得多。祖先婴儿身体发育的延迟最终导致了进化的逆转,他们越来越不能独立地依附于母亲。因此,在史前时期,婴儿第一次被周期性地剥夺了与母亲的直接身体接触。这促使了第二个进化-发展趋势的出现,婴儿使用进化的信号从照顾者那里寻求接触安慰,包括现代婴儿保留的新的哭泣方式。这种信号刺激了史前母亲和婴儿之间强烈的相互作用,为母亲语和随后的原始语言的最终出现埋下了种子。第三个趋势是大脑发育的极端加速,这种加速在怀孕的最后三个月之前开始,并持续到婴儿出生后的第一年(早期的“大脑爆发”)。这种趋势在现代婴儿中得以保留,这解释了为什么人类成年后的大脑大小是黑猩猩的三倍多。古人类颅骨容量的化石记录和比较神经解剖学数据表明,大约300万年前,早期大脑爆发开始促进与神经重组相关的越来越大的成人大脑的进化轨迹。史前大脑体积的增加最终导致分娩变得极其困难,这种困难被称为“产科困境”,可能会限制未来大脑体积的进化,从而使正在进行的神经重组进化获得特权。在现代婴儿中,大脑突飞猛进伴随着神经连接的形成和调整(修剪),以及动态高阶网络的发展,这些网络促进了语法语言的习得,并在后来的发展中促进了其他高级计算能力,如音乐或数学的感知和表现。越来越多的证据表明,语法语言的出现和完善是古人类大脑进化的原动力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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