3919989
Ano: 2025
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AMEOSC
Orgão: Pref. São Miguel Oeste-SC
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: AMEOSC
Orgão: Pref. São Miguel Oeste-SC
Provas:
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Primate thumbs and brains evolved hand-in-hand
By University of Reading Tue, Aug 26, 2025
University of Reading - Longer thumbs mean bigger
brains, scientists have found − revealing how human
hands and minds evolved together. Researchers studied
94 different primate species, including fossils and living
animals, to understand how our ancestors developed
their abilities. They found that species with relatively
longer thumbs, which help with gripping small objects
precisely, consistently had larger brains. The research,
published today (Tuesday, 26 August) in
Communications Biology, provides the first direct
evidence that manual dexterity and brain evolution are
connected across the entire primate lineage, from lemurs
to humans. Humans and our extinct relatives boast both
extraordinarily long thumbs and exceptionally large
brains. However, the link remains strong across all
primates: when scientists removed human data from their
analysis, the connection between thumb length and brain
size remained.
Dr Joanna Baker, lead author from the University of
Reading, said: "We've always known that our big brains
and nimble fingers set us apart, but now we can see they
didn't evolve separately. As our ancestors got better at
picking up and manipulating objects, their brains had to
grow to handle these new skills. These abilities have
been fine-tuned through millions of years of brain
evolution."
Thumbs linked to thinking, not movement
The scientists made a surprising discovery about which
part of the brain grows alongside longer thumbs. They
expected longer thumbs to be linked to the cerebellum
because it is the region of the brain that controls
movement and coordination. Instead, longer thumbs
were connected to the neocortex (a complex layered
region comprising approximately half the volume of the
human brain), which processes sensory information and
handles cognition and consciousness.
It was a surprise that only one of the two major brain
regions they thought would be involved actually was. The
findings suggest that as primates developed better
manual skills for handling objects, their brains had to
grow to process and use these new abilities effectively −
but further work is needed to establish exactly how the
neocortex supports manipulative abilities.
https://popular-archaeology.com/article/primate-thumbs-and-brains-evol
ved-hand-in-hand/