T. Rex not as smart as previously claimed
University of Bristol
Dinosaurs were as smart as reptiles but not as intelligent as monkeys, as former research suggests.
An international team of paleontologists, behavioral
scientists and neurologists have re-examined brain size and structure in
dinosaurs and concluded they behaved more like crocodiles and lizards.
In a study published last year, it was claimed that dinosaurs like T. rex had an exceptionally high number of neurons and were substantially more intelligent than assumed.
It was claimed
that these high neuron counts could directly inform on intelligence, metabolism
and life history, and that T. rex was rather monkey-like in
some of its habits. Cultural transmission of knowledge as well as tool use were
cited as examples of cognitive traits that it might have possessed.
However the new study, published in The Anatomical Record, involving the University of Bristol's Hady George, Dr Darren Naish (University of Southampton) and led by Dr Kai Caspar (Heinrich Heine University) with Dr Cristian Gutierrez-Ibanez (University of Alberta) and Dr Grant Hurlburt (Royal Ontario Museum) takes a closer look at techniques used to predict both brain size and neuron numbers in dinosaur brains.
The team
found that previous assumptions about brain size in dinosaurs, and the number
of neurons their brains contained, were unreliable.
The research follows decades of analysis in which paleontologists and biologists have examined dinosaur brain size and anatomy, and used these data to infer behavior and lifestyle. Information on dinosaur brains comes from mineral infillings of the brain cavity, termed endocasts, as well as the shapes of the cavities themselves.
The team found that their brain size had been
overestimated -- especially that of the forebrain -- and thus neuron counts as
well. In addition, they show that neuron count estimates are not a reliable
guide to intelligence.
To reliably reconstruct the biology of long-extinct species, the team argues, researchers should look at multiple lines of evidence, including skeletal anatomy, bone histology, the behavior of living relatives, and trace fossils.
"Determining the intelligence of dinosaurs
and other extinct animals is best done using many lines of evidence ranging
from gross anatomy to fossil footprints instead of relying on neuron number
estimates alone," explained Hady from Bristol's School of Earth Sciences.
Dr Kai Caspar explained: "We argue that it's not
good practice to predict intelligence in extinct species when neuron counts
reconstructed from endocasts are all we have to go on."
"Neuron counts are not good predictors of cognitive
performance, and using them to predict intelligence in long-extinct species can
lead to highly misleading interpretations," added Dr Ornella Bertrand
(Institut Català de Paleontologia Miquel Crusafont).
"The possibility that T. rex might have been as intelligent as a baboon is fascinating and terrifying, with the potential to reinvent our view of the past," concluded Dr Darren Naish. "But our study shows how all the data we have is against this idea. They were more like smart giant crocodiles, and that's just as fascinating.