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Domestication and Human Evolution

The domestication of other species has played an undeniably central role in the evolution of modern humans, and in our planetary dominance and success. In view of this fact, researchers have over the years investigated the genetic underpinnings and the anatomical, neural, physiological and behavioral consequences of domestication across a number of animal species ? but largely independently of each other. Recently, a convergence of views has led to the notion that the study of animal domestication may tell us something not only about our relationship with domesticated species since perhaps at least the Pleistocene, but also about our own evolution as a species in the more distant past. Specifically, it has been suggested that a number of the unique anatomical, neural, developmental, social, cognitive and communicative traits that define our species may be attributable to selection for lack of aggression and to a process of self-domestication. This symposium brings together researchers from a variety of research backgrounds to examine these concepts and to elucidate further the possible role of domestication in human evolution. (from carta.anthropogeny.org)

Craniofacial Feminization in Canine and Human Evolution. Robert Franciscus (Univ of Iowa) explains that anatomically modern humans are recognized in the fossil record primarily by retraction and diminution of the facial skeleton compared to pre-modern "archaic" humans. He then describes a promising model for the advent of facial diminution, which suggests that anatomically modern humans represent a 'self-domesticated' species where selection for increased social tolerance led to growth and developmental alterations producing craniofacial "feminization," which itself results in a phenotypic signal of reduced aggressiveness.

3. Craniofacial Feminization in Canine and Human Evolution


Go to the Series Home or watch other lectures:

1. The Transformation of Wolf to Dog: History, Traits, and Genetics
2. Fox Domestication and Genetics of Complex Behaviors
3. Craniofacial Feminization in Canine and Human Evolution
4. The Domesticated Brain
5. Neotenous Gene Expression in the Developing Human Brain
6. The Domestication Syndrome and Neural Crest Cells: A Unifying Hypothesis
7. Domestication and Vocal Behavior in Finches
8. Did Homo Sapiens Self-Domesticate?