Human Brain Wiring Underpins Social Sophistication: New Insights for Thai Readers
New neuroscientific findings compare human brains with those of chimpanzees and macaques, revealing how our brain’s internal wiring supports advanced social skills. Researchers from Oxford University and Aix-Marseille Université show that humans differ less in overall size and more in how brain regions connect and communicate. For Thai audiences, this adds depth to our understanding of cognition and social behavior.
The study shifts focus from body size to the brain’s internal architecture. By analyzing MRI data, researchers mapped white matter connections, or connectivity fingerprints, across species. These patterns help explain why humans perform complex social interactions and language tasks more efficiently than other primates.