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Cooking and Cognition: How Humans Got So Smart By Robin Nixon, Special to LiveScience

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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-06-08 08:29 PM
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Cooking and Cognition: How Humans Got So Smart By Robin Nixon, Special to LiveScience
http://www.livescience.com/culture/080811-brain-evolution.html




About 2 million years ago, the human brain rapidly increased its mass until it was double the size of other primate brains. "This happened because we started to eat better food, like eating more meat," said researcher Philipp Khaitovich of the Partner Institute for Computational Biology in Shanghai.

For a long time, we were pretty dumb. Humans did little but make "the same very boring stone tools for almost 2 million years," he said. Then, only about 150,000 years ago, a different type of spurt happened — our big brains suddenly got smart. We started innovating. We tried different materials, such as bone, and invented many new tools, including needles for beadwork. Responding to, presumably, our first abstract thoughts, we started creating art and maybe even religion.

To understand what caused the cognitive spurt, Khaitovich and colleagues examined chemical brain processes known to have changed in the past 200,000 years. Comparing apes and humans, they found the most robust differences were for processes involved in energy metabolism. The finding suggests that increased access to calories spurred our cognitive advances, said Khaitovich, carefully adding that definitive claims of causation are premature...The extra calories may not have come from more food, but rather from the emergence of pre-historic "Iron Chefs;" the first hearths also arose about 200,000 years ago.

In most animals, the gut needs a lot of energy to grind out nourishment from food sources. But cooking, by breaking down fibers and making nutrients more readily available, is a way of processing food outside the body. Eating (mostly) cooked meals would have lessened the energy needs of our digestion systems, Khaitovich explained, thereby freeing up calories for our brains. Instead of growing even larger (which would have made birth even more problematic), the human brain most likely used the additional calories to grease the wheels of its internal functioning. Today, humans have relatively small digestive systems and burn 20-25 percent of their calories running their brains. For comparison, other vertebrate brains use as little as 2 percent of the animal's caloric intake. Does this mean renewing our subscriptions to Bon Appetit will make our brains more efficient? No, but we probably should avoid diving into the raw food movement. Devoted followers end up, said Khaitovich, "with very severe health problems."

Scientists wonder if our cognitive spurt happened too fast. Some of our most common mental health problems, ranging from depression and bipolar disorder to autism and schizophrenia, may be by-products of the metabolic changes that happened in an evolutionary "blink of an eye," Khaitovich said. While other theories for the brain's cognitive spurt have not been ruled out (one involves the introduction of fish to the human diet), the finding sheds light on what made us, as Khaitovich put it, "so strange compared to other animals."
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bananas Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-06-08 09:53 PM
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1. Sounds like they're putting the cart before the horse
The "Iron Chefs" were the result of intelligence.
It was intelligence which enabled the discovery of fire and the ability to cook.
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-06-08 10:33 PM
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2. Not necessarily
One could postulate a forest fire, and subsequent foraging among the dead animals and scorched plants leading to the technology of fire and cooking...

and then the rapid spread of this new knowledge via the gift of language, or perhaps merely the gift of smell...
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trthnd4jstc Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-06-08 10:47 PM
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3. Thanks for the post.
It seems like a reasonable hypothesis. This has been one of the questions on my mind. Why had the Human evolved mentally more than so many other animals.
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-07-08 08:59 AM
Response to Reply #3
4. Just don't feed the dog cooked meat, I guess
or man's best friend will supplant him!
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