Abstract
Hominid brain size increased dramatically
in the face of apparently severe associated evolutionary costs. This suggests
that increasing brain size must have provided some sort of counterbalancing
adaptive benefit. Several recent studies using magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) have indicated that a substantial correlation (mean r = 0.4) exists
between brain size and general cognitive performance, consistent with the
hypothesis that the payoff for increasing brain size was greater general
cognitive ability. However, these studies confound between-family environmental
influences with direct genetic/biological influences. To address this problem,
within-family (WF) sibling differences for several neuroanatomical measures
were correlated to WF scores on a diverse battery of cognitive tests in
a sample of 36 sibling pairs. WF correlations between neuroanatomy and
general cognitive ability were essentially zero, although moderate correlations
were found between prefrontal volumes and the Stroop test (known to involve
prefrontal cortex). These findings suggest that nongenetic influences play
a role in brain volume/cognitive ability associations. Actual direct genetic/biological
associations may be quite small, and yet still may be strong enough to
account for hominid brain evolution.