A five-year old's brain is an energy monster which uses twice as much glucose (the energy that fuels the brain) as that of a full-grown adult, the study led by Northwestern University anthropologists has found.
The study showed that energy funnelled to the brain dominates the human body's metabolism early in life and is likely the reason why humans grow at a pace more typical of a reptile than a mammal during childhood.
"As humans we have so much to learn, and that learning requires a complex and energy-hungry brain," Kuzawa said.
The study is the first to pool existing Positron emission tomography (PET) and Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scan data - which measure glucose uptake and brain volume, respectively - to show that the ages when the brain gobbles the most resources are also the ages when body growth is slowest.
The findings support a long-standing hypothesis in anthropology that children grow so slowly, and are dependent for so long, because the human body needs to shunt a huge fraction of its resources to the brain during childhood, leaving little to be devoted to body growth.
"After a certain age it becomes difficult to guess a toddler or young child's age by their size. Instead you have to listen to their speech and watch their behaviour," Kuzawa said.
It was previously believed that the brain's resource burden on the body was largest at birth, when the size of the brain relative to the body is greatest.
The study appears in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
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