These results call into question "the social brain hypothesis," which has posited that humans and other primates are big-brained due to factors pertaining to sociality.
The findings reinforce the notion that both human and non-human primate brain evolution may be driven by differences in feeding rather than in socialisation.
"Are humans and other primates big-brained because of social pressures and the need to think about and track our social relationships, as some have argued?" said James Higham, an assistant professor in at New York University (NYU).
"Complex foraging strategies, social structures, and cognitive abilities, are likely to have co-evolved throughout primate evolution," said Alex DeCasien, an NYU doctoral candidate.
"However, if the question is: 'Which factor, diet or sociality, is more important when it comes to determining the brain size of primate species?' then our new examination suggests that factor is diet," said DeCasien.
The social brain hypothesis sees social complexity as the primary driver of primate cognitive complexity, suggesting that social pressures ultimately led to the evolution of the large human brain.
Researchers, including Scott Williams, assistant professor of anthropology at NYU, examined more than 140 primate species - or more than three times as many as previous studies - and incorporated more recent evolutionary trees, or phylogenies.
They took into account food consumption across the studied species - folivores (leaves), frugivores (fruit), frugivores/folivores, and omnivores (addition of animal protein) - as well as several measures of sociality, such as group size, social system, and mating system.
Notably, frugivores and frugivore/folivores exhibit larger brains than folivores and, to a lesser extent, omnivores show significantly larger brains than folivores.
"Fruit is patchier in space and time in the environment, and the consumption of it often involves extraction from difficult-to-reach-places or protective skins," said DeCasien.
"Together, these factors may lead to the need for relatively greater cognitive complexity and flexibility in frugivorous species," he said.
The research was published in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution.
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