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posted by on Thursday May 11 2017, @07:57AM   Printer-friendly
from the concentration-of-concentration dept.

By using highly advanced brain imaging technology to observe modern humans crafting ancient tools, an Indiana University neuroarchaeologist has found evidence that human-like ways of thinking may have emerged as early as 1.8 million years ago.

The results, reported May 8 in the journal Nature Human Behavior, place the appearance of human-like cognition at the emergence of Homo erectus, an early apelike species of human first found in Africa whose evolution predates Neanderthals by nearly 600,000 years.

"This is a significant result because it's commonly thought our most modern forms of cognition only appeared very recently in terms of human evolutionary history," said Shelby S. Putt, a postdoctoral researcher with The Stone Age Institute at Indiana University, who is first author on the study. "But these results suggest the transition from apelike to humanlike ways of thinking and behaving arose surprisingly early."

The study's conclusions are based upon brain activity in modern individuals taught to create two types of ancient tools: simple Oldowan-era "flake tools" -- little more than broken rocks with a jagged edge -- and more complicated Acheulian-era hand axes, which resemble a large arrowhead. Both are formed by smashing rocks together using a process known as "flintknapping."

"'Humanlike' Ways of Thinking Evolved 1.8 Million Years Ago," but ape-like thinking remains.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 11 2017, @03:50PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 11 2017, @03:50PM (#508136)

    Uses 'humanlike' in both the title and the summary, but doesn't even bother describing/defining what it means. Reads like a mindless PR blurb.