Larger Primate Brains


Compared to other animals, primates have larger brains relative to their body size. The areas of the brain related to the coordination of the limbs, memory, and vision is increased in primates compared to other mammals.

The more an animal weighs, the more of it there is that its brain must control, and so within certain limits the bigger its brain needs to be. This is true between species, although not between individual members of a given species. A species with a much bigger brain for its body weight - especially in its higher brain centers - has a good chance of being, on some level, smarter. Indeed, for comparable body- weights, humans tend to have bigger brains than other primates; primates than other mammals; mammals than birds; birds than fish; and fish than reptiles. There is some scatter in the data, but the correlation is clear. It corresponds pretty well to the commonly accepted (by humans, of course) rank order of animal intelligence. The earliest mammals had significantly larger brains than their reptilian contemporaries of comparable body weight; and the earliest primates were similarly well-endowed compared to other mammals. We come from big- brained stock. Adult humans, who weigh only a little more than adult chimps, nevertheless have brains three to four times more massive. A human infant a few months old already has a larger brain than a grownup chimpanzee. It seems very likely that we are significantly smarter than the chimps because we have a significantly larger brain - despite the comparable body weights. But the human brain isn't entirely a proportional scaling up of a chimp brain. There is a little bit of brain architecture - not much, but some - that humans have and that other primates at least mainly don't. Significantly, some of it seems to be related to speech.

Primates have five individual toes. All primates, except humans, have a big toe that is positioned on the side of the foot. In this position, the big toe can act in a way similar to a thumb. The foot can grasp objects, such as branches and food. The foot can even hold an orange. Humans on the other hand cannot use their feet for grasping objects. Our foot is designed for bipedal walking. In order for us to be good at walking the way we do, our big toe is parallel to the other toes . The big toe provides balance during each step. When we climb a tree, our feet are unable to grasp branches the way other primates can. Therefore, we aren't very good at climbing and spend most of our time on the ground.
 Prosimians
 Pongids
 Gibbons
 New World Monkeys
 Old World Monkeys
Primate Anatomy
 Locomotion
 Reoriented Use of Senses
 Larger Primate Brains
 Primate Environments
 Dentition
 Primate Diets
 "Social organization"
Primate Evolution
Infant-Mother Bond and Childhood
Diurnal and Nocturnal Behaviors
 Dominance and Hierarchies
 Human Organization as Bands
 One Final Thought
Introductory Page