Human intelligence evolved to care for helpless babies: study
The theory explains specifically why primates developed super intelligence but dinosaurs.
Washington: Human intelligence might have evolved in response to the demands of caring for helpless and vulnerable babies, a new study has found.
Researchers developed a novel evolutionary model according to which the high levels of intelligence may be driven by the demands of raising offspring.
"Human infants are born far more immature than the infants of other species. For example, giraffe calves are able to stand-up, walk around, and even flee from predators within hours of their births," said Celeste Kidd, assistant professor
at the University of Rochester in US. "By comparison, human infants cannot even support their own heads," said Kidd.
"Our theory is that there is a kind of self-reinforcing cycle where big brains lead to very premature offspring and premature offspring lead to parents having to have big brains," said Steven Piantadosi, from University of Rochester. In other words, since humans have relatively big brains, their infants must be born early in development while their heads are still small enough to ensure a safe delivery.
However, early birth means that human infants are helpless for much longer than other primates, and such vulnerable infants require intelligent parents.
As a result, selective pressures for large brains and early birth can become self-reinforcing - potentially creating species like humans with qualitatively different cognitive abilities than other animals.
"What we found is that weaning time - which acts as a measure of the prematurity of the infants - was a much better predictor of primate's intelligence than any of other measures we looked at, including brain size, which is commonly correlated with intelligence," said Piantadosi. Humans are good at social reasoning and something called 'theory of mind' - the ability to anticipate the needs of others, and to recognise that those needs may not be the same
as our own, said Kidd.
"This is an especially helpful when taking care of an infant who is not able talk for a couple of years," she said. "There are alternative theories of why humans are so intelligent. A lot of these are based on factors like living in a harsh environment or hunting in groups," said Piantadosi. "One of the motivating puzzles of our research was thinking about those theories and trying to see why they predict specifically that primates or mammals should become so intelligent, instead of other species that faced similar pressures," he said.
The key is live birth. According to the researchers, the runaway selection of intelligence requires both live birth of a single off spring and large brains, distinctive features of higher mammals. "Our theory explains specifically why primates developed super intelligence but dinosaurs - who faced many of the same environmental pressures and had more time to do so - did not. Dinosaurs matured in eggs, so there was no linking between intelligence and infant immaturity at birth," said Kidd. The study was published in the journal PNAS.