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Re: Cognitive dinosaurs?
Currie and Padian's _Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs_ has several articles of
interest on
these topics. See "Behavior," "Braincase Anatomy," "Intelligence," and
"Paleoneurology." Then locate and read the references listed at the end of
each of
these articles.
In brief, large animals whose cognitive abilities are roughly equivalent to
closely
related small animals will have disproportionately small brains. This is
typical
animal allometry. For example, compare the relative brain sizes or lions and
house
cats. Compare wolf skulls to chihuahua skulls.
Dinosaurs are big and have relatively small brains. No surprise there. Their
"encephalization quotients" compare favorably with those of other reptiles and
some
dinosaurs (such as troodontids) were in league with modern day birds (though at
the
lower end of the extant avian encephalization spectrum).
A search on "encephalization quotient" at <www.google.com> provides 465 results.
That should get you started. Who knows? There might even be posts in the
Dinosaur
Mailing List archives. ;^)
--------Ralph W. Miller III
ralph.miller@alumni.usc.edu
"Ha, ha! Stupid dinosaurs! You're not even smart enough to engineer your own
mass
extinction event!"
"Doh!"