Dolphins and primates have developed similar high-level cognitive abilities

April 6, 2005 | Source: KurzweilAI

Dolphins and primates — and their vastly different brains — both have developed similar high-level cognitive abilities, says Emory University neuroscientist and behavioral biologist Lori Marino.

Recent research by Marino and her colleagues has traced the changing encephalization, or relative brain size, of cetaceans during the past 47 million years by using magnetic resonance imaging and histological studies of the fossil record. While modern humans have brains that are seven times bigger than would be expected for our body size, giving us an encephalization level of seven, some modern dolphins and whales have an encephalization level close to five — not a huge difference, says Marino.

For example, Homo sapiens’ closest relatives, the great apes, have encephalization levels of only two to two-and-a-half.

Emory University Health Sciences Center news release