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Science

Highbrow Highjinks Come to an End 31

nickynicky9doors writes "The Sidney Morning Herald has an article debunking the long standing theory of our specie's dominance based on a proportionally greater development of the frontal lobe. MRI scanning suggest... 'proportionately, there is no major difference in the relative size of the frontal cortex among humans and their closest relatives.'"
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Highbrow Highjinks Come to an End

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  • Re:Language (Score:3, Informative)

    by wrt2 ( 150916 ) on Monday February 18, 2002 @07:19PM (#3029109) Homepage
    Actually, the experiments with teaching sign language to chimpanzees and gorillas demonstrated that human language acqusition and use are different from other primates. People are specialized to learn language; a child will learn spoken language barring severe neurological damage or neglect. (Interestingly, deaf babies have been observed babble-signing with their hands.) Further, children not only acquire pronunciation and vocabulary, but are able to fit them into syntactical grammatical frameworks of arbitrary complexity. Chimpanzees can sign "give drink fruit," but cannot tell a story. "Smarter," though, is a different issue. Chimpanzees and bonobos are brilliant at being chimpanzees and bonobos. Assuming that we don't end life on our planet, we might just be brilliant at being us.
  • Is this for real? (Score:2, Informative)

    by ramb ( 256851 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2002 @11:51AM (#3032154)
    I was just trying to find this paper in Nature Neuroscience (as referenced in the article) and all that's returned is...

    No documents matched the query.
    Search query:Author: Semendeferi
    Your search yielded no results. You may refine this query or perform a new query

    It's not in Nature either. The newest paper I can find is: Am J Phys Anthropol 2001 Mar;114(3):224-41 which is only area 10 and is hardly new enough to be "news for nerds". Anybody have the correct cite?

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