Sol Daniel, Székely Tamás, Liker András, Lefebvre Louis
CREAF (Centre for Ecological Research and Forestry Applications), Autonomous University of Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Catalonia, Spain.
Proc Biol Sci. 2007 Mar 22;274(1611):763-9. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2006.3765.
Big brains are hypothesized to enhance survival of animals by facilitating flexible cognitive responses that buffer individuals against environmental stresses. Although this theory receives partial support from the finding that brain size limits the capacity of animals to behaviourally respond to environmental challenges, the hypothesis that large brains are associated with reduced mortality has never been empirically tested. Using extensive information on avian adult mortality from natural populations, we show here that species with larger brains, relative to their body size, experience lower mortality than species with smaller brains, supporting the general importance of the cognitive buffer hypothesis in the evolution of large brains.
大脑袋被假定通过促进灵活的认知反应来提高动物的生存能力,这种认知反应能保护个体免受环境压力的影响。尽管这一理论从大脑大小限制动物行为应对环境挑战能力的研究发现中获得了部分支持,但大脑袋与死亡率降低相关这一假设从未得到实证检验。利用来自自然种群的关于鸟类成年死亡率的大量信息,我们在此表明,相对于体型而言大脑较大的物种,其死亡率低于大脑较小的物种,这支持了认知缓冲假说在大脑袋进化中的普遍重要性。