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Yes, bigger brains mean higher IQ,
on average
Virginia -
People with bigger brains tend to score higher on standardized
tests of intelligence, according to new study findings.
However, study author Dr. Michael A.
McDaniel of the Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond
emphasized that these findings represent a general trend, and people
with small heads should not automatically believe they are less
intelligent.
For instance, Albert Einstein's brain
was "not particularly large," McDaniel noted.
"There's some relationship (between
brain size and intelligence) on average, but there's plenty of room
for exceptions," he told Reuters Health.
Interest in the relationship between
brain size and intelligence grew in the 1830s, when German anatomist
Frederick Tiedmann wrote that he believed there was "an indisputable
connection between the size of the brain and the mental energy
displayed by the individual man."
Since that statement, scientists have
conducted numerous studies to determine if Tiedmann's assertion was,
in fact, correct. Most studies have investigated the link between head
size and intelligence. More recently, however, researchers have
published additional studies on intelligence and brain size, measured
using MRI scans.
For his study, McDaniel analyzed more
than 20 studies that investigated the relationship between brain size
and intelligence in a total of 1530 people.
The studies showed that on average,
people with larger brain volumes tended to be more intelligent. The
relationship between brain size was stronger in women than men, and in
adults than children, McDaniel notes in the journal Intelligence.
In an interview, McDaniel noted that
he's not sure why the relationship was stronger for adults and women.
Previous research has shown that women, on average, tend to have
smaller brains than men, but score just as well - if not higher - in
tests of intelligence, he said.
McDaniel insisted that the
relationship between brain size and intelligence is not a "perfect"
one. "One can certainly find lots of examples of smaller-brained
people who are highly intelligent," he said. "But, on average, the
relationship holds." -- Reuters
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