Fox, the Shrew, and You

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A01=Rogier B. Mars
A01=Rogier Mars
animal cognition
Author_Rogier B. Mars
Author_Rogier Mars
brain
brain chemistry
brain complexity
brain evolution
brain function
brain genes
brain imaging
brain size
brain structure
Category=PS
Category=PSAJ
Category=PSAN
Category=PSVP
Category=PSXE
cognitive abilities
cognitive capacity
cognitive evolution
communication
comparative
comparative anatomy
comparative neuroscience
cortical development
decision making
developmental biology
encephalization
environmental adaptation
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eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
evolutionary adaptation
evolutionary biology
evolutionary neuroscience
evolutionary pressure
foraging behavior
genetic basis
group dynamics
high-energy food
human brain
human evolution
human uniqueness
intelligence
intelligence evolution
invertebrate nervous system
language evolution
learning mechanisms
mammal
mammalian brain
memory systems
molecular evolution
monkey
motor systems
MRI
natural selection
neocortex evolution
neural circuits
neural development
neural networks
neural plasticity
neuroanatomy
neuroscience
neurotransmitters
phylogenetic analysis
predator evolution
primate
primate brain
problem solving
sea squirt
sensory systems
social behaviour
social cognition
social primates
spatial cognition
species comparison
synaptic evolution
tool use
vertebrate brain
vertebrate origins

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691238920
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Mar 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A leading neuroscientist describes the long evolutionary process that led to the human brain

Our human brain is both unique and similar to that of other species. The only way we can trace its evolution is by comparing it to the brains of animals alive today. In this book, leading neuroscientist Rogier Mars offers an engaging account of the evolution of the brain by exploring the brains and cognitive capacities of animals from the humble sea squirt to the socially minded fox and the tiny shrew.

By examining the challenges that different animals and their ancestors faced, Mars shows that we can understand what drove the evolution of their brains. Early vertebrates became predators of the sea; mammals evolved a complex neocortex to deal with foraging for high-energy food; and social primates adapted to contend with a fast-changing environment in which groups of individuals team up to get food. Over the course of a long evolutionary road, the ancestors of present-day animals and their descendants continually adapted to challenges, modifying their brains again and again. For us humans, this process gradually led to a brain that is capable of so much, from inventing language to traveling into space.

Mars leads readers across eras and species, showing us how we resemble our animal cousins, how we differ from them, and how animals in one branch of the evolutionary tree did the hard evolutionary work of becoming human.

Rogier B. Mars is professor of neuroscience at the University of Oxford and principal investigator at Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands.

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