Learning how to cook food stimulated a big leap in human
cognition some 150,000 years ago, a new study suggests. Cooking
breaks down fibers and makes nutrients more readily available,
so our digestive systems then required less energy than those
of creatures eating all raw foods. This freed calories up
to feed our brains, the thinking goes.
Weighing in at an average of 2.7 pounds (1,200 grams), the
human brain packs a whopping 100 billion neurons. Every minute,
about three soda-cans worth of blood flow through the brain.
After two tremendous growth spurts — one in size, followed
by an even more important one in cognitive ability —
the human brain is now a lot like a teenage boy.
It consumes huge amounts of calories, is rather temperamental
and, when harnessed just right, exhibits incredible prowess.
The brain's roaring metabolism, possibly stimulated by
early man's invention of cooking, may be the main factor
behind our most critical cognitive leap, new research suggests.
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.
But the increase in size, Khaitovich continued, "did
not make humans as smart as they are today."
The early shift
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 research is detailed in the August 2008 issue of Genome
Biology.
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.
Digestion question
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.
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."