Evolutionary Anthropology Research Group, Department of Anthropology, University of Durham, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, UK
Department of Anthropology, University of Zürich-Irchel, Winterthurerstr. 190, Zürich 8057, Switzerland.
Proc Biol Sci. 2017 Oct 25;284(1865). doi: 10.1098/rspb.2017.1765.
Comparative studies have identified a wide range of behavioural and ecological correlates of relative brain size, with results differing between taxonomic groups, and even within them. In primates for example, recent studies contradict one another over whether social or ecological factors are critical. A basic assumption of such studies is that with sufficiently large samples and appropriate analysis, robust correlations indicative of selection pressures on cognition will emerge. We carried out a comprehensive re-examination of correlates of primate brain size using two large comparative datasets and phylogenetic comparative methods. We found evidence in both datasets for associations between brain size and ecological variables (home range size, diet and activity period), but little evidence for an effect of social group size, a correlation which has previously formed the empirical basis of the Social Brain Hypothesis. However, reflecting divergent results in the literature, our results exhibited instability across datasets, even when they were matched for species composition and predictor variables. We identify several potential empirical and theoretical difficulties underlying this instability and suggest that these issues raise doubts about inferring cognitive selection pressures from behavioural correlates of brain size.
比较研究已经确定了相对大脑大小的一系列行为和生态相关性,结果因分类群而异,甚至在同一分类群内也存在差异。例如,在灵长类动物中,最近的研究相互矛盾,不确定是社会因素还是生态因素是关键。这些研究的一个基本假设是,通过足够大的样本和适当的分析,将出现指示认知选择压力的稳健相关性。我们使用两个大型比较数据集和系统发育比较方法,对灵长类动物大脑大小的相关性进行了全面重新检查。我们在两个数据集中都发现了大脑大小与生态变量(活动范围大小、饮食和活动期)之间存在关联的证据,但几乎没有证据表明社会群体大小的影响,这一相关性以前是社会大脑假说的经验基础。然而,反映文献中存在的分歧结果,我们的结果在数据集之间表现出不稳定性,即使它们在物种组成和预测变量方面相匹配。我们确定了这种不稳定性背后的几个潜在经验和理论困难,并表明这些问题对从大脑大小的行为相关性推断认知选择压力提出了质疑。