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Dean Falk (born June 25, 1944) is an American academic neuroanthropologist who specializes in the evolution of the brain and cognition in higher primates. She is the Hale G. Smith Professor of Anthropology and a Distinguished Research Professor at
Florida State University Florida State University (FSU) is a public research university in Tallahassee, Florida. It is a senior member of the State University System of Florida. Founded in 1851, it is located on the oldest continuous site of higher education in the st ...
.


Career

As an undergraduate, Falk studied mathematics and anthropology. Since receiving her PhD from the University of Michigan in 1976, she has taught courses in anatomy, neuroanatomy, and anthropology. Falk is interested in the evolution of the brain and cognition. She formulated the “radiator theory” that cranial blood vessels were important for hominin brain evolution, and the “putting the baby down” hypothesis that prehistoric mothers and infants facilitated the emergence of language. She and colleagues described the brain of ''Homo floresiensis'' ("Hobbit") in 2005. In 2013, Falk and colleagues described the cerebral cortex of Albert Einstein from recently emerged photographs of his whole brain. In 2017, Falk coauthored a study with Charles Hildebolt on warfare in small-scale and state societies, which found that people are no less violent today than they were in the past. Falk coauthored a 2018 book on
Asperger's syndrome Asperger syndrome (AS), also known as Asperger's, is a former neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by significant difficulties in social interaction and nonverbal communication, along with restricted and repetitive patterns of behav ...
with her 24-year-old granddaughter who has Asperger's, and, in 2019, published a refutation of the allegation that Hans Asperger was a Nazi sympathizer. This was in turn refuted by the original author, Herwig Czech, who opined that Falk's paper abounded "with mistranslations, misrepresentations of the content of sources, and basic factual errors, and omits everything that does not support the author’s agenda of defending Hans Asperger’s record." He declared that the paper should never have passed the peer review process and should be retracted.


''Homo floresiensis''

After the skeletal remains of a "Hobbit"-sized human (museum number LB1) that are now dated to over 65,000 years ago were discovered on the Indonesian island of Flores in 2003 they were identified as a new species labelled ''
Homo floresiensis ''Homo floresiensis'' also known as "Flores Man"; nicknamed "Hobbit") is an extinct species of small archaic human that inhabited the island of Flores, Indonesia, until the arrival of modern humans about 50,000 years ago. The remains of an i ...
'' (“Hobbit”). Some scientists thought that the specimen must have been a pygmy or a
microcephalic Microcephaly (from New Latin ''microcephalia'', from Ancient Greek μικρός ''mikrós'' "small" and κεφαλή ''kephalé'' "head") is a medical condition involving a smaller-than-normal head. Microcephaly may be present at birth or it m ...
— a human with an abnormally small skull. Falk undertook a collaborative study in 2005 that described Hobbit's endocast and supported the claim that the find represented a new species. Falk's 2005 study was criticized by other experts. In response, in 2007 with an international team of experts, Falk compared detailed maps of imprints left on the ancient hominid's braincase (
endocast An endocast is the internal cast of a hollow object, often referring to the cranial vault in the study of brain development in humans and other organisms. Endocasts can be artificially made for examining the properties of a hollow, inaccessible sp ...
s) with those from microcephalic individuals and concluded that LB1, indeed, represented a new species that may have been descended from either ''
Homo erectus ''Homo erectus'' (; meaning "upright man") is an extinct species of archaic human from the Pleistocene, with its earliest occurrence about 2 million years ago. Several human species, such as '' H. heidelbergensis'' and '' H. antecessor' ...
'' or an earlier small-bodied hominin. Falk's team have repeatedly asserted that their findings confirm that the species cataloged as LB1, ''Homo floresiensis'', is definitely not a human born with microcephalia — a somewhat rare pathological condition that still occurs today. She has also participated in other studies that refute the idea that LB1 had Laron syndrome or Down syndrome. Today, most experts do not think that LB1 was a diseased human. As noted by Westaway ''et al.'' (MC Westaway et al. 015 Mandibular evidence supports Homo floresiensis as a distinct species.  ''PNAS'' 112 E604-E605), "Many interesting questions about the Liang Bua fossils remain unanswered, but whether LB1 is a pathological ''H. sapiens'' is not one of them".


Human Brain Evolution

In 2014, Dean Falk published her work on "Interpreting sulci on hominin endocasts: old hypotheses and new findings in ''Frontiers in Human Neuroscience''". Her work summarized what paleoneurologists could potentially learn about human brain evolution from fossils, which is confined to information about the evolution of brain size and how limited parts of the cerebral cortex became reorganized during evolution. Falk noted that the cerebral cortex is a highly evolved part of the human brain and that it facilitates conscious thought, planning, language, social skills, and scientific, artistic, and musical creativity. The cerebral cortex may leave imprints in skulls which are sometimes reproduced on endocasts. Falk observed that these studies exclude the internal brain structures that cannot be described by paleoneurologists because they do not show up on endocasts. These parts of the brain also evolved, and they are extremely important for processing memories, gut-level feelings, and social interactions in ways that set humans apart from other animals. In 2018, Falk and colleagues published an ''in vivo'' MRI study of the cerebral cortices of eight adult chimpanzees in which they identified sulcal patterns and compared them to those known from australopithecines and ''Homo naledi''. This study showed that the frontal lobe sulcal patterns of australopiths (and ''H. naledi)'' were not derived compared to extant apes, contrary to Falk's 2014 paper.


Publications


Select books

* Falk, D. and E.P. Schofield (2018) ''Geeks, Genes, and the Evolution of Asperger Syndrome''. University of New Mexico Press. * Hofman, M.A. and D. Falk (eds) (2012) ''Evolution of the Primate Brain: From Neuron to Behavior''. Progress in Brain Research, Elsevier. * Falk, Dean (2011). ''The Fossil Chronicles: How Two Controversial Discoveries Changed Our View of Human Evolution''. University of California Press. . * Falk, D. (2009) ''Finding Our Tongues: Mothers, Infants and the Origin of Language'', Basic Books, New York * Falk, D. (2004) ''Braindance Revised and Expanded''. University Press of Florida * Falk, D. and K. Gibson (eds) (2001) ''Evolutionary Anatomy of the Primate Cerebral Cortex''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press * Falk, D. (2000) ''Primate Diversity''. New York: Norton


Select journal articles

* Falk, D. (2019). More on Asperger’s Career: A reply to Czech. ''Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders'': https://doi.org/10.1007/s10803-019-04099-6. * Falk, D. (2019). Non-complicit: Revisiting Hans Asperger's Career in Nazi-era Vienna. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10803-019-03981-7 * Falk, D., Zollikofer, C.P.E., Ponce de Leon, M., Semendeferi, K., Warren, J.L.A., & W.D. Hopkins (2018). Identification of in ''vivo'' sulci on the external surface of eight adult chimpanzee brains: Implications for interpreting early hominin endocasts. ''Brain Behav Evol''  (DOI:10.1159/000487248) * Falk, D. & C. Hildebolt (2017). Annual war deaths in small-scale versus state societies scale with population size rather than violence. ''Current Anthropology'' 58(6):805-813. * Falk, D. (2014). Interpreting sulci on hominin endocasts: Old hypotheses and new findings. ''Frontiers in Human Neuroscience'' 8:134. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00134. * Weiwei, M., Falk, D., Sun, T., Chen, Wl, Li, J., Yin, D., Zang, L., & M. Fan. (2013). The corpus callosum of Albert Einstein’s brain: another clue to his high intelligence? ''Brain'', doi : 10.1093/brain/awt252

* Falk, D., Lepore, F., Noe, A. (2013). The cerebral cortex of Albert Einstein: A description and preliminary analysis of unpublished photographs, ''Brain'' 136(4): 1304-1327. http://brain.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2012/11/14/brain.aws295.full * Falk, D. Happiness: An evolutionary perspective. (2012). In B. R. Johnston (Ed.), second ''Vital Topics Forum “On Happiness,”'' the ''American Anthropologist'' 114(1):8-9. * Falk, D. (2009). The natural endocast of Taung (''Australopithecus africanus''): Insights from the unpublished papers of Raymond Arthur Dart, ''Yrbk. Phys. Anthropol''. Series 52:49-65. * Falk, D., Hildebolt,C., Smith, K., Morwood, M.J., Sutikna, T., Jatmiko, Saptomo, W.E., Imhof, H., Seidler, H. & F. Prior. (2007). Brain shape in human microcephalics and ''Homo floresiensis''. PNAS 104:2513-2518. * Falk, D., Hildebolt, C., Smith, K., Morwood, M.J., Sutikna, T., Brown, P., Jatmiko, Saptomo W. E., Brunsden, B. & F. Prior. (2005). The brain of LB1, ''Homo floresiensis. Science Express'', March 3, 2005; ''Science'' 308:242-245. * Falk, D. Prelinguistic evolution in early hominins: Whence motherese? (target article) (2004). ''Behavioral and Brain Sciences'' 27:491-503. * Falk, D. Brain evolution in ''Homo'': the "radiator" theory (target article). (1990). ''Behav. Brain Sci''. 13:333-344.


See also

* Albert Einstein's brain


References


External links

*

Florida State University faculty profile

Falk: Human Brain Evolution {{DEFAULTSORT:Falk, Dean 1944 births Falk Dean American paleoanthropologists Florida State University faculty Living people Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies alumni