It is often the case in interdisciplinary accounts of human evolution that archaeological data are either ignored or treated superficially. This article sets out to redress this position by using archaeological evidence from the last 2.5 million years to test the social brain hypothesis (SBH) – that our social lives drove encephalization. To do this we construct a map of our evolving social complexity that concentrates on two resources – materials and emotions – that lie at the basis of all social interaction. In particular, novel cultural and biological mechanisms are seen as evolutionary responses to problems of cognitive load arising from the need to integrate more individuals and sub-units into the larger communities predicted by the SB...
on t p ved rad He sp ed lud tive ev aeo emotions of others (Gallese & Lakoff 2005; Gallese provo...
What can relics of the past tell us about the thoughts and beliefs of the people who invented and us...
Culture is increasingly being framed as a driver of human phenotypes and behaviour. Yet very little ...
It is often the case in interdisciplinary accounts of human evolution that archaeological data are e...
New developments in neuroimaging have demonstrated that the basic capacities underpinning human soci...
Relative to other primates, modern humans live social lives of remarkable complexity, maintaining re...
The Social Brian Hypothesis predicts the cognitive ability of hominin species by utilising estimated...
In the last few million years, the hominin brain more than tripled in size. Comparisons across evolu...
In the last few million years, the hominin brain more than tripled in size. Comparisons across evolu...
In the last few million years, the hominin brain more than tripled in size. Comparisons across evolu...
The current dominant view is that the evolutionary pressures leading to our large brain sizes were p...
aspects of human development that differ from those of other animals as a result of our uniquely ext...
While it is a commonplace to state that every age gets the Neanderthals it either deserves, or wants...
The reconstruction of Palaeolithic society has never been easy with the evidence available. It is ar...
Paleolithic stone tools provide concrete evidence of major developments in human behavioural and cog...
on t p ved rad He sp ed lud tive ev aeo emotions of others (Gallese & Lakoff 2005; Gallese provo...
What can relics of the past tell us about the thoughts and beliefs of the people who invented and us...
Culture is increasingly being framed as a driver of human phenotypes and behaviour. Yet very little ...
It is often the case in interdisciplinary accounts of human evolution that archaeological data are e...
New developments in neuroimaging have demonstrated that the basic capacities underpinning human soci...
Relative to other primates, modern humans live social lives of remarkable complexity, maintaining re...
The Social Brian Hypothesis predicts the cognitive ability of hominin species by utilising estimated...
In the last few million years, the hominin brain more than tripled in size. Comparisons across evolu...
In the last few million years, the hominin brain more than tripled in size. Comparisons across evolu...
In the last few million years, the hominin brain more than tripled in size. Comparisons across evolu...
The current dominant view is that the evolutionary pressures leading to our large brain sizes were p...
aspects of human development that differ from those of other animals as a result of our uniquely ext...
While it is a commonplace to state that every age gets the Neanderthals it either deserves, or wants...
The reconstruction of Palaeolithic society has never been easy with the evidence available. It is ar...
Paleolithic stone tools provide concrete evidence of major developments in human behavioural and cog...
on t p ved rad He sp ed lud tive ev aeo emotions of others (Gallese & Lakoff 2005; Gallese provo...
What can relics of the past tell us about the thoughts and beliefs of the people who invented and us...
Culture is increasingly being framed as a driver of human phenotypes and behaviour. Yet very little ...