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Evolution of Intelligence More Complex Than Once Thought

palegray.net writes "According to a new article published in Scientific American, the nature of and evolutionary development of animal intelligence is significantly more complicated than many have assumed. In opposition to the widely held view that intelligence is largely linear in nature, in many cases intelligent traits have developed along independent paths. From the article: 'Over the past 30 years, however, research in comparative neuroanatomy clearly has shown that complex brains — and sophisticated cognition — have evolved from simpler brains multiple times independently in separate lineages ...'"

21 of 453 comments (clear)

  1. Intelligent Design proof... by DrYak · · Score: 5, Funny

    This proves that the Intelligent Designer:
    - has never been taught of proper design practice and re-use of previous work
    - has been sued by the other intelligent designer who built the previous brain for patent infringement and thus couldn't use the same brain but had to built a new one
    - is so messy that instead of trying to dig again her/his/its plans of the previous (intelligent) design for brains somewhere under a mountain of junk, restarting everything from scratch is a better alternative
    - isn't meticulous and precise enough be succeed making the same brain twice in a row
    - is so bored the she/he/it needs to reinvent the wheel every week or so
    - has Alzheimer's disease

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  2. Re:Wow, evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm curious, assuming you really don't "believe in evolution," what do you believe stops it? Leptons and quarks organize themselves into atoms, atoms into molecules, molecules into amino acids and peptide chains. All of this has been observed in nature or laboratory facsimiles thereof. So what magical force prevents organization from continuing to higher and higher levels, especially once rudimentary feedback loops form?

    I've seriously never understood the classical religious position on this stuff. I don't believe it would take a God to steer evolution; based on all available evidence, it would take a God to stop it.

  3. Re:Linearity in Complexity???!!! by azaris · · Score: 4, Informative

    The article doesn't mean 'linear' in the sense of 'linear dependence on a set of variables', but rather 'linear' as in 'sequence of events that follow one another as a direct consequence of the previous one'.

  4. Re:The hard work is just around the corner... by MichaelSmith · · Score: 4, Funny

    Some time ago I read that spamming software had broken the captcha in gmail. Today I had to log into my gmail account and discovered that I am unable to parse the captcha.

    Maybe I am not as smart as I thought I was.

  5. I don't believe it. by slim · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What I don't believe is the "many have assumed" bit.

    Parallel evolution is evident in all kinds of animal and plant features. I can't imagine why intelligence would be any different.

    I strongly suspect that most evolutionary scientists don't consider these findings to be surprising. Still, it makes a better headline if you pretend it's a shock discovery.

  6. Re:Wow, evolution by wild_quinine · · Score: 5, Funny

    I don't believe it would take a God to steer evolution; based on all available evidence, it would take a God to stop it.

    Hence, the bible belt.

  7. Re:You kid, but... by slim · · Score: 4, Interesting

    . as if following some pre-determined path to a completed, human state.

    Or, as if there are a limited number of adequate solutions to the problem 'control a bunch of muscles in order to survive in a three dimensional environment in which other organisms are trying to do the same thing'.

    It seems like what we're seeing is that *if* a species randomly goes down the brain route, it'll either die out, or develop a brain very like other brains. Note that many organisms survive very nicely with no brain at all. Where's their "pre-determined path to a completed human state"?

  8. What's the difference? by jambox · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So the upshot here is that the intelligence of any given creature is not a function of it's size or age (in evolutionary terms) but is very tightly geared towards the problems it likely faces in it's natural environment.

    For example, even a spider can do quite tricky maths in order to work out how to spin a web between arbitrary fixed points, yet is completely flummoxed by even the simplest general knowledge quiz.

    So what I want to know is, what was it about human beings that caused us to develop the capacity to drive cars, build computers and walk on the moon?

    --
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    1. Re:What's the difference? by jambox · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's a bit like us when we can simply immediately point to an intercept between two curves on a graph.

      When we do that, there is some maths happening in our brains, it just isn't conscious. You're right, that is exactly what is happening in the spider's case. However to "just point" to an intercept seems like an incredibly simple thing to us, but to do it with the amount of brain cells a spider has is quite a trick. Bear in mind this all has to come from sensory data - it has to find branches, blades of grass or whatever and make a decision whether it is feasible to spin a web there, using very rough input from it's eyes. Try writing software for a robot to do that - if you manage it you might get a nobel prize. Even in a very simplified virtual world with perfect data, there would be a fair bit of maths, even if it's just basic trig.

      --
      You thought you could break the laws of physics without paying the PRICE?
    2. Re:What's the difference? by GrahamCox · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I guess what I meant was there isn't any maths going on that we would recognise as having anything to do with finding the intercept between two curves. There sure is a lot of visual processing going on that is breathtaking in its capability, but however that works it's unrelated to the usual method of solving intercepts!

      One observation I made many years ago led me to realise that we mostly underestimate what even small brains routinely do. I was watching a hovering seagull while waiting at some traffic lights. It was scanning the road surface below for a few seconds, then swooped down and picked up the tiniest speck of food from the tarmac. This was on a busy city street with lots of litter and other debris on the road, such as small stones and gravel, cigarette butts, etc. The tarmac itself presented a "noisy" image background and yet the gull picked out that speck as being worth expending its energy on from a height of 30 or so feet while maintaining balance in flight in a gusty high wind with a lot of moving traffic around. The image processing required to do that boggles my mind! So much for bird-brains.

      It's not such a leap to suppose that intelligence, whatever it is, is far more common than we assume. What counts as intelligent for a dog, cat or even a bright bird like a Magpie is probably not something we'd really recognise. Every creature's intelligence is uniquely its own.

  9. Re:More complex? I'd have thought less complex if. by slim · · Score: 5, Informative

    this means the nascent potential evolutionary building blocks for intelligence are widely distributed in species in nature and given a chance will give riser to a smarter brain.

    It takes more than a chance - it takes evolutionary pressure. If something's already perfectly adapted to its environment without a brain, then it's unlikely to evolve one. A brain might even reduce the fitness of an organism (by diverting energy that could be better used for other survival/reproduction mechanisms).

  10. Re:You kid, but... by Veggiesama · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You kid, but this is pretty good support for the intelligent design theory. Here we have multiple organisms evolving human traits independently... as if following some pre-determined path to a completed, human state.

    Wrong, unless that "completed, human state" also looks like a super-intelligent squid capable of toppling the feeble empires of man.

    The only reason there isn't a super-intelligent, man-eating squid race is because we beat the squids by a few evolutionary epochs, and their ancestors (who are currently living but less than super-intelligent) will probably go extinct before they have a chance to grow a better brain and develop an oceanic civilization of their own.

    But rest assured, I'm sure they would have hypothesized an intelligent designer of their own. Only their intelligent designer would have tentacles on its face, and he would live under aquatic heat vents in heaven while sending the unfaithful to those hellish clouds way above the water.

  11. Re:Wow, evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    However, we deny that species evolve into other species. For example, fish do not become horses and cats do not become giraffes.

    Do you understand the idea behind "common ancestors?" Nobody has ever claimed that fish become horses and other such absurdities. Burning a straw man without an EPA permit is likely to result in a hefty fine, unless, I guess, if you do it out in the middle of the desert.

    You are aware that speciation -- divergence of one species into two incompatible ones -- has been demonstrated, right? What barriers do you propose might exist that prevent one ancestral population from diverging into two arbitrarily-different ones? Be specific.

  12. Re:Wow, evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm curious, assuming you really don't "believe in evolution," what do you believe stops it? Leptons and quarks organize themselves into atoms, atoms into molecules, molecules into amino acids and peptide chains.

    I dropped a petitde chain this morning the size of a small baryonic particle. At one point, I wasn't sure if I was taking physics, or if the physics was taking me. And while I'm on that point, what's the deal with studying physics? Shouldn't it be physically studying? I'm certainly not taking anything with me when I'm done.

    But back on topic, that dude's argument didn't make any sense, so why did you even respond?

  13. O RLY? Convergent evolution? Is that news? by linhares · · Score: 4, Informative

    As I've wrote before (f*cking IEEE paywall):

    "Convergent evolution is one of the most impressive concepts of Darwinian thought. As stated in the literature, "It is all the more striking a testimony to the power of natural selection that numerous examples can be found in real nature, in which independent lines of evolution appear to have converged, from very different starting points, on what looks very like the same endpoint" [Dawkins's Blind Watchmaker, p. 94]. Eyesight is a good example of a remarkable biological tool that has appeared independently many times. For instance, the octopus' eye has evolved from a line independent of our lineage, and there are records of some 40 such "parallel" lines of evolution leading to the development of eyes [L. F. Land, "Optics and vision in invertebrates," in Handbook of Sensory Physiology, Vol. VII, H. Autrum, Ed. Berlin: Springer Verlag, 1980, pp. 471-592]."

  14. Re:Wow, evolution by Sabz5150 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    However, we deny that species evolve into other species. For example, fish do not become horses and cats do not become giraffes.

    Fish and horses are quite a bit more than a species apart. That doesn't just require speciation (what you Christians call "maroevolution"), but it requires the jumping of genus, family, order, perhaps more depending on your comparison.

    There is not one single science paper stating that this happens. Nobody says "Fish become horses". This is a typical creationist (read: Christian) misstatement and misunderstanding. It shows you really don't know what evolution means or says.

    Now I have heard an example of modern evolution that defines a new species like this: suppose you have a fish that is normally green, but occasionally a mutation occurs and a blue fish is born among the green fish. Suppose these fish live near some green coral where the green fish blend in and thus survive more than the blue fish. Then, say that several of the green and blue fish migrate away from that area several miles to where there happens to be a lot of blue coral. Now, the green fish die off and the blue fish survive. Over time these two populations no longer breed amongst each other. By my understanding, evolution defines them as two separate species and state that MACRO-evolution has occurred. I call that a convenient definition to suit evolutionist agenda. Utterly ridiculous.

    That is what is known as speciation. This is when one species becomes two. Again, what you Christians call "macroevolution", or evolution of one species into another. What you have described above is evolution... you have random mutation (your blue fish), natural selection (the green coral environment and the predators within), genetic isolation (a group of these fish move to a different environment), natural selection once again (the blue coral environment and its predators), and this results in speciation (the green and blue are separate and will no longer breed with one another).

    One species is now two. Evolution. Now, do this process six-hundred-million times.

    I have a hard time accepting evolution in general due to the wild leaps it makes. For instance, Ben Stein asked Richard Dawkins about the origins of life in the universe and the possibility of intelligent design. The best answer that a practiced scientist and atheist can give on the spot is that some higher form of life evolved and then populated the earth with life. That is, aliens evolved & put life on earth. But, the aliens themselves would have had to evolved through some natural process. THAT is his answer to intelligent design. He answered NOTHING, but merely moved the issue to another planet. It is circular reasoning. I simply do not understand this die-hard attitude towards something that many reputable scientists have abandoned and continue to abandon to this day.

    Yes, that is Dawkins' answer to Intelligent Design. This is not a reference to anything pertaining to evolution. Stein asked how ID could be applied to science, and the ONLY way is if alien life (intelligent) seeded Earth (design). Why is this the only answer? Because a deity is not science. Your God is not scientifically verifiable. Therefore it (and anything pertaining to it... your Bible, creationism, cdesign proponentists, etc.) cannot be a scientific answer to anything.

    And for further reference, Stein was referring to life on Earth, not life in "the universe", something that IDists do not believe in either.

    --
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  15. Re:You kid, but... by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Funny

    there isn't a super-intelligent, man-eating squid race

    Go tell that to him, but he won't be happy.

    Disclaimer: he doesn't shoot the bearer of bad tidings, but he will eat his soul.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  16. Re:Wow, evolution by nickruiz · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is not one single science paper stating that this happens. Nobody says "Fish become horses". This is a typical creationist (read: Christian) misstatement and misunderstanding. It shows you really don't know what evolution means or says.

    Please don't pidgeonhole all Christians under the Creationist camp. There are many Christians that are not diametrically opposed to evolutionary theory. Rather, we see the creation story in Genesis to be allegorical and poetic, instead of trying to place it under textbook scrutiny.

  17. Re:Wow, evolution by Zerth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's actually true, isn't it? Fish -> amphibians -> reptiles -> mammals.

    .

    Hardly, more like


    Proto-fish
    Intermediate fish . Proto-amphibian
    Intermediate fish . Intermediate-amphibian . Proto-Reptile
    Intermediate fish . Intermediate-amphibian . Intermediate-Reptile . Proto-Mammal
    __ Current Fish _ . __ Current Amphibian _ . __ Current Reptile _ . _ Current Mammal
    .

    Most modern fish are as far from the common ancestor as modern amphibians, reptiles, and mammals; barring archae that live in relatively unchanging, low mutation ecologies.

  18. Re:Wow, evolution by Skreems · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For instance, Ben Stein asked Richard Dawkins about the origins of life in the universe and the possibility of intelligent design. The best answer that a practiced scientist and atheist can give on the spot is that some higher form of life evolved and then populated the earth with life. That is, aliens evolved & put life on earth. But, the aliens themselves would have had to evolved through some natural process. THAT is his answer to intelligent design. He answered NOTHING, but merely moved the issue to another planet.

    As Dawkins himself answers here, the entire question at that point was nonsensical. Stein was asking a man who emphatically believes that Intelligent Design is nonsense to construct a scenario in which Intelligent Design might have happened. And as ID proponents so often point out when asked about the religious implications of their position, "they're not necessarily talking about a deity." Well, what does that leave, apart from aliens? The entire exchange in question is basically a believer getting a scientist to describe Intelligent Design's own belief structure, and then crucifying him because he didn't mention God. It's ID that's nonsensical, Dawkins was merely repeating your own words back to you.

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  19. Re:You kid, but... by bckrispi · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why don't Republicans believe in Evolution?

    Because the first generation in their sample was Abraham Lincoln. The last was George W. Bush.

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