优生性
生物
社会性
大脑大小
神经解剖学
基因组学
社会复杂性
社会进化
比较基因组学
认知
进化生物学
神经科学
认知科学
认知心理学
基因组
生态学
心理学
基因
遗传学
社会学
磁共振成像
放射科
医学
社会科学
膜翅目
作者
James F. A. Traniello,Timothy A. Linksvayer,Zachary N. Coto
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cois.2022.100962
摘要
Brain evolution is hypothesized to be driven by requirements to adaptively respond to environmental cues and social signals. Diverse models describe how sociality may have influenced eusocial insect-brain evolution, but specific impacts of social organization and other selective forces on brain architecture have been difficult to distinguish. Here, we evaluate predictions derived from and/or inferences made by models of social organization concerning the effects of individual and collective behavior on brain size, structure, and function using results of neuroanatomical and genomic studies. In contrast to the predictions of some models, we find that worker brains in socially complex species have great behavioral and cognitive capacity. We also find that colony size, the evolution of worker physical castes, and task specialization affect brain size and mosaicism, supporting the idea that sensory, processing and motor requirements for behavioral performance select for adaptive allometries of functionally specialized brain centers. We review available transcriptomic and comparative genomic studies seeking to elucidate the molecular pathways functionally associated with social life and the genetic changes that occurred during the evolution of social complexity. We discuss ways forward, using comparative neuroanatomy, transcriptomics, and comparative genomics, to distinguish among multiple alternative explanations for the relationship between the evolution of neural systems and social complexity.
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