Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Brain network behind superior reasoning skills identified

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Dec, 2014 10:31 AM
    Scientists have found mounting evidence that helps explain how humans have excelled in "relational reasoning" or superior reasoning.
     
    "Relational reasoning" is a cognitive skill in which we understand patterns to make sense of seemingly unrelated information.
     
    Subtle shifts in the frontal and parietal lobes of the brain are linked to superior cognition.
     
    "This research has led us to take seriously the possibility that tweaks to this network over an evolutionary time scale could help to explain differences in the way that humans and other primates solve problems," said principal investigator Silvia Bunge, neuroscientist at University of California, Berkeley.
     
    "It is not just that we humans have language at our disposal. We also have the capacity to compare and integrate several pieces of information in a way that other primates do not," Bunge noted.
     
    The frontoparietal network in the brain plays a key role in analysis, memory retrieval, abstract thinking and problem-solving.
     
    Anatomical changes in the lateral frontoparietal network over millennia have served to boost human reasoning skills, explained researchers.
     
    "Given the supporting evidence across species, we posit that connections between these frontal and parietal regions have provided the necessary support for our unique ability to reason using abstract relations," said Michael Vendetti from University of California, Berkeley.
     
    Humans were found to use higher-order strategies to guide their judgement while non-human primates relied more on perceptual similarities and were slower at reasoning and problem-solving.
     
    "The findings allow us to gain insights into human intelligence by examining how we got to where we are by examining our changes across both evolution and development," Bunge concluded.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Neuron.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Get Ready! Facebook Set To Take On Youtube

    Get Ready! Facebook Set To Take On Youtube
    Get ready for a fierce content war between YouTube and Facebook. The social networking site is in talks with some of the biggest video content producers of YouTube to test videos directly on Facebook, media reported.

    Get Ready! Facebook Set To Take On Youtube

    Busted: Sex Toys Preferred By Men Too

    Busted: Sex Toys Preferred By Men Too
    It is a myth that most sex toys are bought by young, single women. In fact, sales of sex toys is split evenly between both the sexes, claims the world's biggest study of sex toy sales.

    Busted: Sex Toys Preferred By Men Too

    Sunshine linked to suicide risk

    Sunshine linked to suicide risk
    According to researchers from the Medical University of Vienna, sunshine is indeed linked to fatal self-harm, independent of the season....

    Sunshine linked to suicide risk

    People send most 'swear' tweets on Monday

    People send most 'swear' tweets on Monday
    According to British researchers, Monday evenings saw a particularly high percentage of tweets containing swear words that may be related to job pressure after...

    People send most 'swear' tweets on Monday

    Brain map shows how people take aim

    Brain map shows how people take aim
    Are you amazed at the success of Serena Williams who has just won her third consecutive US Open title? Along with physical strength and endurance...

    Brain map shows how people take aim

    How our nose detects odours

    How our nose detects odours
    Humans can detect and distinguish a trillion different odours and researchers have now identified the chemical strategy that the nose applies to perceive...

    How our nose detects odours