@IterIntellectus: the temperature at which brain...

@IterIntellectus
14 views Mar 13, 2025
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the temperature at which brains develop affects brain connectivity and behavior

lower temperatures lead to brains with over twice the connectivity and synaptic complexity

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new research from Johannes Gutenberg University, published in Science Advances, shows cooler developmental temperatures lead to significantly more complex neural wiring.

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temperatures dramatically influence the speed of development. previous studies suggested cooler conditions increased neural connectivity, but mechanisms and functional impacts were still unknown .

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the team studied Drosophila's olfactory system, using tools like trans-Tango labeling and optogenetics to map neural circuits across varied developmental temperatures.

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a novel metabolic model proposes neural growth and overall organism growth are governed by different metabolic rates, causing better neural connectivity at lower temperatures.
basically
hot T -> body grows faster, brain is smaller
low T -> body grows slower, brain is bigger

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their data confirms that cooler temperatures enhance synapse number, size, and complexity by a lot, neurons developed at 18°C formed over double the connections seen at 25°C.

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what this means practically: lower temperature doesn’t just increase connectivity, it fundamentally changes neuronal communication, particularly improving neural pathways that regulate innate behaviors.

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more connections translate to improved overall function. odor encoding is stronger because increased synapses, downstream processing and signal interpretation are also significantly improved.

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developmental temperature doesn't simply alter the speed of growth, it generally reshapes the brain architecture and behavior, offering evolutionary advantages.

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the next research steps include expanding this analysis to additional brain regions and species, to verify if this metabolic-driven wiring principle is general, and understand the underlying metabolic constraints.

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these insights could change our understanding of developmental plasticity, informing new strategies for address neurodevelopmental disorders linked to early developmental environments.

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for those saying "peaters in shambles", this isn't anti-peat. cold boosts synapses because neural growth outpaces body growth specifically during development
once mature, peat's warmer metabolism still wins for health and performance
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