News
9h
Live Science on MSNNeanderthal genes may explain disorder where brain bulges out of the skull
Neanderthal genes may explain why some people have Chiari malformation type I, a condition in which the brain bulges out of ...
2d
The Brighterside of News on MSNBreakthrough discovery links Neanderthal DNA and autism
When modern humans first migrated out of Africa about 60,000 years ago, they crossed paths with Neanderthals. Over thousands ...
9d
ScienceAlert on MSNBrain Abnormality in Modern Humans Linked to Ancient Neanderthal DNA
Significant brain defects known as Chiari malformations could be down to the genes some of us have inherited from ...
Scientists from the University of California San Diego have inserted Neanderthal DNA into clusters of human brain tissue. Their work could shed light on how our brains evolved and how they differ ...
7d
News Medical on MSNNeanderthal DNA Linked to Rare Brain Disorder
New research suggests Chiari Malformation Type 1, a serious brain disorder, may result from Neanderthal genes passed down ...
If you regularly experience headaches, dizziness, balance problems and blurred vision, our Neanderthal cousins could be to ...
For example, if the Neanderthals had less brain area devoted to social cognition, it might explain why they traveled shorter distances, had fewer symbolic artifacts and lived in smaller communities.
From studying fossilized skulls, scientists know that the size of a Neanderthal’s brain was the same as, if not slightly bigger than, that of a modern human. However, researchers have known ...
Comparing scans. To learn more about when differences in brain shape first started appearing in development, researchers created virtual imprints of 11 Neanderthal brains, including a newborn ...
Even though Neanderthals had larger skulls, and thus larger brain volume overall, H. sapiens had a proportionately larger cerebellum, the part of brain involved in movement, balance, vision ...
Although Neanderthals' brains were similar in size to their contemporary modern human counterparts, fresh analysis of fossil data suggests that their brain structure was rather different.
Scientists from the University of California San Diego have inserted Neanderthal DNA into clusters of human brain tissue. Their work could shed light on how our brains evolved and how they differ ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results