| Literature DB >> 27075921 |
Sandra A Heldstab1, Zaida K Kosonen1, Sonja E Koski2, Judith M Burkart1, Carel P van Schaik1, Karin Isler1.
Abstract
Humans occupy by far the most complex foraging niche of all mammals, built around sophisticated technology, and at the same time exhibit unusually large brains. To examine the evolutionary processes underlying these features, we investigated how manipulation complexity is related to brain size, cognitive test performance, terrestriality, and diet quality in a sample of 36 non-human primate species. We categorized manipulation bouts in food-related contexts into unimanual and bimanual actions, and asynchronous or synchronous hand and finger use, and established levels of manipulative complexity using Guttman scaling. Manipulation categories followed a cumulative ranking. They were particularly high in species that use cognitively challenging food acquisition techniques, such as extractive foraging and tool use. Manipulation complexity was also consistently positively correlated with brain size and cognitive test performance. Terrestriality had a positive effect on this relationship, but diet quality did not affect it. Unlike a previous study on carnivores, we found that, among primates, brain size and complex manipulations to acquire food underwent correlated evolution, which may have been influenced by terrestriality. Accordingly, our results support the idea of an evolutionary feedback loop between manipulation complexity and cognition in the human lineage, which may have been enhanced by increasingly terrestrial habits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27075921 PMCID: PMC4830942 DOI: 10.1038/srep24528
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The eight manipulation complexity categories found through the Guttman scaling method (increasing complexity from category 1 to category 8), and the number of species able to perform actions in a particular manipulation complexity category.
Copyright S.A. Heldstab, Pan troglodytes nut cracking K. Koops.
PGLS models with manipulation complexity as response variable and tool use, extractive foraging or cognitive test performance as explanatory variables.
| Data set | adj. | Predictor variable | Estimate | Std. error | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| excluding | 36 | 0.694 | 0.125 | tool use | 0.917 | 0.374 | |
| including | 37 | 0.731 | 0.172 | tool use | 1.052 | 0.361 | |
| excluding | 36 | 0.760 | 0.077 | extractive foraging | 0.520 | 0.263 | 0.056 |
| including | 37 | 0.808 | 0.081 | extractive foraging | 0.554 | 0.271 | |
| Deaner | 15 | 0 | 0.552 | cog. performance | 0.983 | 0.230 | |
| Reader | 19 | 0.444 | 0.396 | cog. performance | 0.566 | 0.158 |
Significant effects are highlighted in bold face.
PGLS models with manipulation complexity as response variable and brain size as explanatory variables, terrestriality and diet quality as covariates singly and as combined models (n = 34, Homo sapiens excluded).
| Model | adj | AIC | ∆AIC | Predictor variables | Estimate | Std. error | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| model 1 | 0 | 0.728 | – | log brain | 1.286 | 0.387 | |||
| log body | −0.551 | 0.312 | 0.087 | ||||||
| terrestriality | 0.948 | 0.328 | |||||||
| model 2 | 0 | 0.721 | 62.463 | 1.690 | log brain | 1.376 | 0.429 | ||
| log body | −0.618 | 0.346 | 0.081 | ||||||
| terrestriality | 0.927 | 0.335 | |||||||
| log diet quality | −0.313 | 0.607 | 0.610 | ||||||
| model 3 | 0 | 0.663 | 67.105 | 6.332 | log brain | 1.274 | 0.430 | ||
| log body | −0.416 | 0.343 | 0.234 | ||||||
| model 4 | 0 | 0.659 | 68.438 | 7.665 | log brain | 1.422 | 0.474 | ||
| log body | −0.531 | 0.376 | 0.165 | ||||||
| log diet quality | −0.513 | 0.666 | 0.447 | ||||||
| model 5 | 0.147 | 0.567 | 68.498 | 7.725 | terrestriality | 0.863 | 0.374 | ||
| log body | 0.439 | 0.098 | |||||||
| model 6 | 0.211 | 0.461 | 73.783 | 13.010 | log diet quality | −0.069 | 0.659 | 0.918 | |
| log body | 0.531 | 0.101 |
Body mass is always included as covariate.
Significant effects and best-fitting models are highlighted in bold face.
Figure 2Relationship between manipulation complexity and ln (brain size), for various types of substrate use (raw species values, blue = terrestrial, green = partly terrestrial, red = arboreal) shown for visualisation purpose.
Species values are listed in Supplementary Table S1. Homo sapiens is not included in the calculation of the correlation and is only shown for illustrative purposes. Statistics see Table 2.
Mean and width of the 95% confidence intervals obtained through bootstrapping.
| Data set | 95% CI mean | 95% CI width | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 25 species | nonhuman primates | 1.205 | 1.186–1.225 |
| 1.294 | above the upper CI | ||
| 30 species | nonhuman primates | 1.236 | 1.224–1.249 |
| 1.294 | above the upper CI |