Was Tyrannosaurus rex as smart as a baboon? Scientists don’t like to compare intelligence between species (everyone has their own talents, after all), but a controversial new study suggests some dino brains were as densely packed with neurons as those of modern primates. If so, that would mean they were very smart—more than researchers previously thought—and could have achieved feats only humans and other very intelligent animals have, such as using tools.
The findings, reported last week in the Journal of Comparative Neurology, are making waves among paleontologists on social media and beyond. Some are applauding the paper as a good first step toward better understanding dinosaur smarts, whereas others argue the neuron estimates are flawed, undercutting the study’s conclusions.
Measuring dinosaur intelligence has never been easy. Historically, researchers have used something called the encephalization quotient (EQ), which measures an animal’s relative brain size, related to its body size. A T. rex, for example, had an EQ of about 2.4, compared with 3.1 for a German shepherd dog and 7.8 for a human—leading some to assume it was at least somewhat smart.
EQ is hardly foolproof, however. In many animals, body size evolves independently from brain size, says Ashley Morhardt, a paleoneurologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis who wasn’t involved in the study. “EQ is a fraught metric, especially when studying extinct species.”
Looking for a more trustworthy alternative, Suzana Herculano-Houzel, a neuroanatomist at Vanderbilt University, turned to a different measure: the density of neurons in the cortex, the wrinkly outer brain area critical to most intelligence-related tasks. She had previously estimated the number of neurons in many animal species, including humans, by making “brain soup”—dissolving brains in a detergent solution—and counting the neurons in different parts of the brain.
That’s not possible with dinosaur brains. But Herculano-Houzel recognized an opportunity last year when researchers published a large database showing that, compared with reptiles, birds (and mammals) have much higher densities of neurons in their cortexes. Modern birds are related to extinct theropods—a group of carnivorous dinosaurs that included T. rex—so Herculano-Houzel wanted to see whether she could use some comparative anatomy tricks to estimate the neuronal density of dinos.
Based on estimated brain masses obtained with CT scans of dinosaur skulls (see 3D model, below), and a large database of brain masses of birds and reptiles from last year, she developed an equation correlating an animal’s brain mass with the approximate number of neurons in the cerebrum, which includes the cortex. She found that theropod brains roughly follow the same rules as warm-blooded modern birds, such as ostriches, whereas the brains of sauropod dinosaurs, such as Brachiosaurus, are more similar to those in modern cold-blooded reptiles. Ornithischians, another dinosaur group that includes Triceratops, as well as some pterosaurs followed one or the other brain equation, depending on the species. Then, she ran the numbers and came up with a series of estimated neuronal densities for a variety of dinosaur species.
“It’s awesome, quite frankly, to be able to get these numbers for these amazing creatures that don’t exist anymore and to be able to add something to the puzzle of what were their lives like … before the asteroid,” Herculano-Houzel says.