The social-brain hypothesis refers to a quantitative relationship between social-group size and neocortex volume in monkeys and apes. This relationship predicts a group size of approximately 150 for humans, which turns out to be the typical size of both social communities in small-scale societies and personal social networks in the modern world. This constraint on the size of social groups is partly cognitive and partly temporal. It gives rise to a layered structure in primate and human social groups that, in humans, reflects both emotional closeness in relationships and the frequency of contact. These findings have potentially important implications for the way in which human organizations are structured. © The Author(s) 2014
Abstract In a series of experiments Dunbar (1993; 1995; 1998) has demonstrated that social group si...
The social brain (or Machiavellian Intelligence) hypothesis was proposed to explain primates' unusua...
Why did humans become as intelligent as they are? The Social Brain Hypothesis claims that general ab...
The social-brain hypothesis refers to a quantitative relationship between social-group size and neoc...
The social-brain hypothesis refers to a quantitative relationship between social-group size and neo...
The ‘Social Brain Hypothesis’ suggests that selection for the expansion of the neocortex in primate ...
The ‘social brain hypothesis’ for the evolution of large brains in primates has led to evidence for ...
The ‘social brain hypothesis’ for the evolution of large brains in primates has led to evidence for ...
The social brain hypothesis was proposed as an explanation for the fact that primates have unusually...
SummaryThe social brain hypothesis generically posits that increasing social group size relates is a...
e am e re tric mo do ativ ip, m e i cl eg gro agm asi coh correla (Dunb Shultz synony group are no g...
Popular academic ideas linking physiological adaptations to social behaviors are spreading disconcer...
Throughout the eighties evidence from a range of sources suggested that primate’s large brains were...
Popular academic ideas linking physiological adaptations to social behaviors are spreading disconcer...
Most primates are intensely social and spend a large amount of time servicing social relationships. ...
Abstract In a series of experiments Dunbar (1993; 1995; 1998) has demonstrated that social group si...
The social brain (or Machiavellian Intelligence) hypothesis was proposed to explain primates' unusua...
Why did humans become as intelligent as they are? The Social Brain Hypothesis claims that general ab...
The social-brain hypothesis refers to a quantitative relationship between social-group size and neoc...
The social-brain hypothesis refers to a quantitative relationship between social-group size and neo...
The ‘Social Brain Hypothesis’ suggests that selection for the expansion of the neocortex in primate ...
The ‘social brain hypothesis’ for the evolution of large brains in primates has led to evidence for ...
The ‘social brain hypothesis’ for the evolution of large brains in primates has led to evidence for ...
The social brain hypothesis was proposed as an explanation for the fact that primates have unusually...
SummaryThe social brain hypothesis generically posits that increasing social group size relates is a...
e am e re tric mo do ativ ip, m e i cl eg gro agm asi coh correla (Dunb Shultz synony group are no g...
Popular academic ideas linking physiological adaptations to social behaviors are spreading disconcer...
Throughout the eighties evidence from a range of sources suggested that primate’s large brains were...
Popular academic ideas linking physiological adaptations to social behaviors are spreading disconcer...
Most primates are intensely social and spend a large amount of time servicing social relationships. ...
Abstract In a series of experiments Dunbar (1993; 1995; 1998) has demonstrated that social group si...
The social brain (or Machiavellian Intelligence) hypothesis was proposed to explain primates' unusua...
Why did humans become as intelligent as they are? The Social Brain Hypothesis claims that general ab...