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Eating meat may have kick-started the evolution of bigger brains, but carbohydrate consumption, particularly in the form of cooked starchy foods together with evolution of genes that increased our ability to digest starch made us smarter, says new research.
London: Eating meat may have kick-started the evolution of bigger brains, but carbohydrate consumption, particularly in the form of cooked starchy foods together with evolution of genes that increased our ability to digest starch made us smarter, says new research.
Up until now, there has been a heavy focus on the role of animal protein and cooking in the development of the human brain over the last two million years, and the importance of carbohydrate, particular in form of starch-rich plant foods, has been largely overlooked. In this new study, Karen Hardy from Autonomous University of Barcelona in Spain and her team brought together data to argue that carbohydrate consumption was critical for the accelerated expansion of the human brain over the last million years.
Our digestive system transforms carbohydrates into glucose which is then used as energy. The human brain uses up to 25 per cent of the body's energy budget and up to 60 per cent of blood glucose. While synthesis of glucose from other sources is possible, it is not the most efficient way, and these high glucose demands are unlikely to have been met on a low carbohydrate diet, the study noted.
Moreover, human pregnancy and lactation place additional demands on the body's glucose budget and low maternal blood glucose levels compromise the health of both the mother and her offspring, the authors argued. They pointed out that starches would have been readily available to ancestral populations and that while raw starches are often only poorly digested in humans, when cooked they become far more easily digested. The increase in the amount of salivary amylase genes in humans also increased our ability to digest starch.
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