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Fossil skulls reveal that blood flow rate to the brain increased faster than brain volume during human evolution. | LitMetric

Fossil skulls reveal that blood flow rate to the brain increased faster than brain volume during human evolution.

R Soc Open Sci

Brain Function Research Group, School of Physiology , University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, Gauteng 2193 , South Africa.

Published: August 2016

The evolution of human cognition has been inferred from anthropological discoveries and estimates of brain size from fossil skulls. A more direct measure of cognition would be cerebral metabolic rate, which is proportional to cerebral blood flow rate (perfusion). The hominin cerebrum is supplied almost exclusively by the internal carotid arteries. The sizes of the foramina that transmitted these vessels in life can be measured in hominin fossil skulls and used to calculate cerebral perfusion rate. Perfusion in 11 species of hominin ancestors, from to archaic , increases disproportionately when scaled against brain volume (the allometric exponent is 1.41). The high exponent indicates an increase in the metabolic intensity of cerebral tissue in later species, rather than remaining constant (1.0) as expected by a linear increase in neuron number, or decreasing according to Kleiber's Law (0.75). During 3 Myr of hominin evolution, cerebral tissue perfusion increased 1.7-fold, which, when multiplied by a 3.5-fold increase in brain size, indicates a 6.0-fold increase in total cerebral blood flow rate. This is probably associated with increased interneuron connectivity, synaptic activity and cognitive function, which all ultimately depend on cerebral metabolic rate.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5108958PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.160305DOI Listing

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