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No, facial features don't indicate intelligence


New research debunks the belief that you can assess intelligence based on facial features.
Researchers have identified more than 70 genes that affect variation in both brain and facial structure. The genes don’t influence cognitive ability, however.
Although developmental biologists are used to thinking about the developing face as a receptacle for the embryonic brain morphing and stretching as the growing brain pushes outward it turns out that the face is an active participant in biological cross-talk during development that affects the three-dimensional features of both structures.
“We were astonished to find 76 genetic regions that affect both face and brain shape in the human population,” says Joanna Wysocka, professor of chemical and systems biology and of developmental biology at Stanford University. ....

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Genetic Link Identified Between Face and Brain Shape


Genetic Link Identified Between Face and Brain Shape
by Hannah Joy on 
April 5, 2021 at 10:35 PM
About 76 overlapping genetic locations have been identified that shape both our face and brain, reveals an interdisciplinary team led by KU Leuven and Stanford.
What the researchers didn t find is evidence that this genetic overlap also predicts someone s behavioral-cognitive traits or risk of conditions such as Alzheimer s disease. This means that the findings help to debunk several persistent pseudoscientific claims about what our face reveals about us.
There were already indications of a genetic link between the shape of our face and that of our brain, says Professor Peter Claes from the Laboratory for Imaging Genetics at KU Leuven, who is the joint senior author of the study with Professor Joanna Wysocka from the Stanford University School of Medicine. ....

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International team identifies genetic link between face and brain shape


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An interdisciplinary team led by KU Leuven and Stanford has identified 76 overlapping genetic locations that shape both our face and our brain. What the researchers didn t find is evidence that this genetic overlap also predicts someone s behavioural-cognitive traits or risk of conditions such as Alzheimer s disease. This means that the findings help to debunk several persistent pseudoscientific claims about what our face reveals about us.
There were already indications of a genetic link between the shape of our face and that of our brain, says Professor Peter Claes from the Laboratory for Imaging Genetics at KU Leuven, who is the joint senior author of the study with Professor Joanna Wysocka from the Stanford University School of Medicine. But our knowledge on this link was based on model organism research and clinical knowledge of extremely rare conditions, Claes continues. We set out to map the genetic link between individuals face and brain shape much more ....

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A Genetic Link Between Face and Brain Shape - Neuroscience News


Neuroscience News
Neuroscience research articles are provided.
What is neuroscience? Neuroscience is the scientific study of nervous systems. Neuroscience can involve research from many branches of science including those involving neurology, brain science, neurobiology, psychology, computer science, artificial intelligence, statistics, prosthetics, neuroimaging, engineering, medicine, physics, mathematics, pharmacology, electrophysiology, biology, robotics and technology.
– What is neurology?
– Definition of neurology: a science involved in the study of the nervous systems, especially of the diseases and disorders affecting them.
– Neurology research can include information involving brain research, neurological disorders, medicine, brain cancer, peripheral nervous systems, central nervous systems, nerve damage, brain tumors, seizures, neurosurgery, electrophysiology, BMI, brain injuries, paralysis and spinal cord treatments. ....

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New technique reveals genes underlying human evolution


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One of the best ways to study human evolution is by comparing us with nonhuman species that, evolutionarily speaking, are closely related to us. That closeness can help scientists narrow down precisely what makes us human, but that scope is so narrow it can also be extremely hard to define. To address this complication, researchers from Stanford University have developed a new technique for comparing genetic differences.
Through two separate sets of experiments with this technique, the researchers discovered new genetic differences between humans and chimpanzees. They found a significant disparity in the expression of the gene SSTR2 - which modulates the activity of neurons in the cerebral cortex and has been linked, in humans, to certain neuropsychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer s dementia and schizophrenia - and the gene EVC2, which is related to facial shape. The results were published March 17 in ....

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