A Connectomic Hypothesis for the Hominization of the Brain

Author:

Changeux Jean-Pierre12ORCID,Goulas Alexandros3ORCID,Hilgetag Claus C34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CNRS UMR 3571, Institut Pasteur, 75724 Paris, France

2. Communications Cellulaires, Collège de France, 75005 Paris, France

3. Institute of Computational Neuroscience, University Medical Center Eppendorf, Hamburg University, 20246 Hamburg, Germany

4. Department of Health Sciences, Boston University, Boston, MA 02115, USA

Abstract

Abstract Cognitive abilities of the human brain, including language, have expanded dramatically in the course of our recent evolution from nonhuman primates, despite only minor apparent changes at the gene level. The hypothesis we propose for this paradox relies upon fundamental features of human brain connectivity, which contribute to a characteristic anatomical, functional, and computational neural phenotype, offering a parsimonious framework for connectomic changes taking place upon the human-specific evolution of the genome. Many human connectomic features might be accounted for by substantially increased brain size within the global neural architecture of the primate brain, resulting in a larger number of neurons and areas and the sparsification, increased modularity, and laminar differentiation of cortical connections. The combination of these features with the developmental expansion of upper cortical layers, prolonged postnatal brain development, and multiplied nongenetic interactions with the physical, social, and cultural environment gives rise to categorically human-specific cognitive abilities including the recursivity of language. Thus, a small set of genetic regulatory events affecting quantitative gene expression may plausibly account for the origins of human brain connectivity and cognition.

Funder

Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Human Brain Program

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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