How smart was T. rex? Testing claims of exceptional cognition in dinosaurs and the application of neuron count estimates in palaeontological research

Author:

Caspar Kai R.12ORCID,Gutiérrez‐Ibáñez Cristián3ORCID,Bertrand Ornella C.45ORCID,Carr Thomas6,Colbourne Jennifer A. D.7ORCID,Erb Arthur89,George Hady10ORCID,Holtz Thomas R.1112ORCID,Naish Darren13ORCID,Wylie Douglas R.3,Hurlburt Grant R.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Cell Biology Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf Düsseldorf Germany

2. Department of Game Management and Wildlife Biology, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Sciences Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Czech Republic

3. Department of Biological Sciences University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

4. Institut Català de Paleontologia Miquel Crusafont Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Barcelona Spain

5. Section of Mammals Carnegie Museum of Natural History Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

6. Department of Biology Carthage College Kenosha Wisconsin USA

7. Comparative Cognition Unit, Messerli Research Institute University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna Vienna Austria

8. School of GeoSciences, Grant Institute University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

9. Center for Science, Teaching, and Learning Rockville Centre New York USA

10. School of Earth Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

11. Department of Geology University of Maryland College Park Maryland USA

12. Department of Paleobiology National Museum of Natural History Washington District of Columbia USA

13. School of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Environment and Life Sciences University of Southampton Southampton UK

14. Department of Natural History Royal Ontario Museum Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractRecent years have seen increasing scientific interest in whether neuron counts can act as correlates of diverse biological phenomena. Lately, Herculano‐Houzel (2023) argued that fossil endocasts and comparative neurological data from extant sauropsids allow to reconstruct telencephalic neuron counts in Mesozoic dinosaurs and pterosaurs, which might act as proxies for behaviors and life history traits in these animals. According to this analysis, large theropods such as Tyrannosaurus rex were long‐lived, exceptionally intelligent animals equipped with “macaque‐ or baboon‐like cognition”, whereas sauropods and most ornithischian dinosaurs would have displayed significantly smaller brains and an ectothermic physiology. Besides challenging established views on Mesozoic dinosaur biology, these claims raise questions on whether neuron count estimates could benefit research on fossil animals in general. Here, we address these findings by revisiting Herculano‐Houzel's (2023) work, identifying several crucial shortcomings regarding analysis and interpretation. We present revised estimates of encephalization and telencephalic neuron counts in dinosaurs, which we derive from phylogenetically informed modeling and an amended dataset of endocranial measurements. For large‐bodied theropods in particular, we recover significantly lower neuron counts than previously proposed. Furthermore, we review the suitability of neurological variables such as neuron numbers and relative brain size to predict cognitive complexity, metabolic rate and life history traits in dinosaurs, coming to the conclusion that they are flawed proxies for these biological phenomena. Instead of relying on such neurological estimates when reconstructing Mesozoic dinosaur biology, we argue that integrative studies are needed to approach this complex subject.

Publisher

Wiley

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