If you’re a big-headed guy or gal at a rationalist puddle cuddle, double check that your rubbers didn’t get punctured.

  • @[email protected]
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    214 months ago

    Aren’t smaller, better-connected brains more likely to be from an intelligent person? I’m not sure there’s a relationship between intelligence and brain size in general.

    Also, huge head does not imply large brain inside the head.

    • @[email protected]
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      364 months ago

      Our brain shape science basically boils down to:

      • missing big pieces usually makes it work less well.
      • folds and creases seem good?
      • Not too much fluid!
      • Not too little either!
      • front part seems pretty important for thinking.
      • middle too.
      • “stuff” in the brain is almost always bad for thinking. Like rocks and things. Neurons, blood and the right blend of fluids are great.
      • phrenology is pretty wrong. Like, super wrong.

      Beyond that, we know a bunch of stuff about brains and neurons and how they all piece together, but just based on lookin’, we’re pretty bad at judging a person based on their head and brain.

      • Codex
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        124 months ago

        instructions unclear; adding rocks to brain for hard thinking

        • @[email protected]
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          94 months ago

          No! That will probably do something bad! Or nothing, depending on complex factors we’ve not totally figured out!

          At least wash it first and take some before and after images.

      • @[email protected]
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        44 months ago

        Based on my neurology classes, I feel like we have some idea what some parts of the brain do. Obviously full on experiments would be unethical, but we can like, observe which neural pathways formed in people with the same life style (so Taxi Drivers have larger and more developed sections focused on navigation). We can observe what happens to people who take the same kinds of damage, and occasionally we get lucky and we can see what happens to people with grievous injuries or rare maladies. Also, we can do experiments on creatures like snails which far less complex brains.

        The brain is certainly an interesting a weird black box, but we do have outs to learn some things

        • @[email protected]
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          94 months ago

          Oh, totally. We legitimately know tons of stuff about brains, including what most parts are typically used for. We just can’t tell much based on eyeball lookin’, we’ve gotta get in there with FMRI and EEGs.

          I’m purely referring to head/brain size or gross physical properties and how they relate to intelligence.

          Show a neurologist a photograph of a random brain and ask them to assess the owners intelligence.
          The only thing they really have to go on is that if you can photograph someone’s brain, signs aren’t typically looking great for them.
          They’ll be making guesses based on vague correlations, and also getting fidgety about what you even mean by intelligence, since that’s also not a simple measure.

        • @[email protected]
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          64 months ago

          Oh, I forgot to mention that we can also do some weird experiments with rats. Teach a bunch of rats how to do a maze, or complete some task, and then surgically remove different bits of each of their brains.
          Unless you really mess them up, they usually remember how to do the maze.

          https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5001904/

          It’s why missing a chunk won’t make the neurologist definitely say it’s impaired someone’s intelligence.

          https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2023/03/22/1165131907/neuroplasticity-plasticity-glass-half-full-girl

          It’s an extreme case, but definitely indicative of how visual examination is just not great for assessing brain function.

          • @[email protected]
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            34 months ago

            Yeah, brain plasticity is really fascinating. One of the guys I work with, its the only way to teach him anything. He had a heroin overdose like 15 years ago. He has basically no short term memory, but I’ve been able to get him to retain things via repetition. Mostly repetitive physical tasks, but social media, with advertisers constantly pinging him, has also been a very powerful reminder. He’s big into the EDM scene and he remembers events, both past and future, because social media keeps buzzing him and reminding him. I wish there was a way to harness that power for good.

            But obviously, I’ve never seen his brain before.

    • @[email protected]
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      174 months ago

      I have a big head (I needed to pick the bigger helmets when I went gokarting) so yes, there is a huge relationship between IQ and brain size. Don’t mock my chunky noggin please.

    • @givesomefucks
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      14 months ago

      It’s the wrinkles more than the size.

      Like, surface area is really important. And you can get a little.more by increasing overall size, but wrinkles do it too without needing a crazy big head.

      The guy in the screenshot seems to think “big brains” are literally better brains. Which science stopped at least over a century ago