Experts have long suspected that complex social interaction drove the
evolution of large brains in humans. Now a study in wasps supports and
refines that theory: it seems that dominant individuals have larger
brain regions responsible for higher-order cognitive processes.



Biologists at the University of Washington observed the behavior of
paper wasps (Mischocyttarus mastigorphorus) in the Costa Rican rain
forest and then measured the size of their brains. The researchers found
that the so-called mushroom bodies, the lobes that underlie learning and
memory in insects, were larger in dominant wasps than in their
subordinate peers.

Mushroom bodies are the insect equivalent of the human neocortex, the
outer layer of our brain, which handles complex cognition. Scientists
have already established that the neocortex and the mushroom bodies are
larger in social special such as humans and wasps, as compared with
solitary animals such as bears and lone spiders. The new study suggests
that competition for rank may have been a key factor in the evolution of
this intelligence.

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra

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