| Literature DB >> 29467267 |
Andrew Du1, Andrew M Zipkin2,3, Kevin G Hatala2,4, Elizabeth Renner2,5, Jennifer L Baker2,6, Serena Bianchi2, Kallista H Bernal2, Bernard A Wood2.
Abstract
A large brain is a defining feature of modern humans, yet there is no consensus regarding the patterns, rates and processes involved in hominin brain size evolution. We use a reliable proxy for brain size in fossils, endocranial volume (ECV), to better understand how brain size evolved at both clade- and lineage-level scales. For the hominin clade overall, the dominant signal is consistent with a gradual increase in brain size. This gradual trend appears to have been generated primarily by processes operating within hypothesized lineages-64% or 88% depending on whether one uses a more or less speciose taxonomy, respectively. These processes were supplemented by the appearance in the fossil record of larger-brained Homo species and the subsequent disappearance of smaller-brained Australopithecus and Paranthropus taxa. When the estimated rate of within-lineage ECV increase is compared to an exponential model that operationalizes generation-scale evolutionary processes, it suggests that the observed data were the result of episodes of directional selection interspersed with periods of stasis and/or drift; all of this occurs on too fine a timescale to be resolved by the current human fossil record, thus producing apparent gradual trends within lineages. Our findings provide a quantitative basis for developing and testing scale-explicit hypotheses about the factors that led brain size to increase during hominin evolution.Entities:
Keywords: endocranial volume; evolutionary mode; hominin evolution; macroevolution; microevolution; phenotypic evolution
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29467267 PMCID: PMC5832710 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2017.2738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349