Updated
Updated · ScienceAlert · Jul 9
Study of 79 Cephalopod Species Challenges Social Brain Theory as Habitat Emerges as Driver
Updated
Updated · ScienceAlert · Jul 9

Study of 79 Cephalopod Species Challenges Social Brain Theory as Habitat Emerges as Driver

1 articles · Updated · ScienceAlert · Jul 9

Summary

  • Researchers analyzing 79 cephalopod species found larger brains tracked habitat—especially shallow, seafloor environments—rather than how social octopuses, squid and cuttlefish were.
  • The iScience study argues cephalopods undermine the social brain hypothesis because many are solitary, short-lived and sometimes cannibalistic, yet still show large brains and complex behavior.
  • Instead, the team says ecological complexity and food-rich settings likely reward learning and information storage, aligning with the cultural brain hypothesis proposed in 2018.
  • Social cephalopods including squid, bobtail squid and cuttlefish did not consistently have larger brains as group living increased, suggesting sociality is not a universal route to intelligence.

Insights

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