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== Brain Size == | == Brain Size == | ||
[[File:Brain weight age.gif|thumb|Average brain weight for males and females over lifespan. From the study ''Changes in brain weights during the span of human life.''|360x360px]]A human baby's brain at birth averages 369 cm<sup>3 </sup>and increases, during the first year of life, to about 961 cm<sup>3</sup>, after which the growth rate declines. Brain volume peaks at the teenage years,{{pmid|10491603}} and after the age of 40 it begins declining at 5% per decade, speeding up around 70.{{pmid|16461469}} Average adult male brain weight is {{convert|1345|g}}, while an adult female has an average brain weight of {{convert|1222|g}}.<ref>{{Cite book|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=u1bwQj7qdsYC|title = Reader in Gender archaeology|access-date = 2014-09-21|publisher = Routlegde|author1=Kelley Hays |author2=David S. |isbn = 9780415173605|year = 1998}}</ref> (This does not take into account neuron density nor brain-to-body mass ratio; men on average also have larger bodies than women.) | [[File:Brain weight age.gif|thumb|Average brain weight for males and females over lifespan. From the study ''Changes in brain weights during the span of human life.''|360x360px]]A human baby's brain at birth averages 369 cm<sup>3 </sup>and increases, during the first year of life, to about 961 cm<sup>3</sup>, after which the growth rate declines. Brain volume peaks at the teenage years,{{pmid|10491603}} and after the age of 40 it begins declining at 5% per decade, speeding up around 70.{{pmid|16461469}} Average adult male brain weight is {{convert|1345|g}}, while an adult female has an average brain weight of {{convert|1222|g}}.<ref>{{Cite book|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=u1bwQj7qdsYC|title = Reader in Gender archaeology|access-date = 2014-09-21|publisher = Routlegde|author1=Kelley Hays |author2=David S. |isbn = 9780415173605|year = 1998}}</ref> (This does not take into account neuron density nor brain-to-body mass ratio; men on average also have larger bodies than women.) | ||
Total cerebral and gray matter volumes peak during the ages from 10–20 years (earlier in girls than boys), whereas white matter and ventricular volumes increase. There is a general pattern in neural development of childhood peaks followed by adolescent declines (e.g. synaptic pruning). Consistent with adult findings, average cerebral volume is approximately 10% larger in boys than girls. However, such differences should not be interpreted as imparting any sort of functional advantage or disadvantage; gross structural measures may not reflect functionally relevant factors such as neuronal connectivity and receptor density, and of note is the high variability of brain size even in narrowly defined groups, for example children at the same age may have as much as a 50% differences in total brain volume.{{pmid|18346658}} | |||
Total cerebral and gray matter volumes peak during the ages from 10–20 years (earlier in girls than boys), whereas white matter and ventricular volumes increase. There is a general pattern in neural development of childhood peaks followed by adolescent declines (e.g. synaptic pruning). Consistent with adult findings, average cerebral volume is approximately 10% larger in boys than girls. However, such differences should not be interpreted as imparting any sort of functional advantage or disadvantage; gross structural measures may not reflect functionally relevant factors such as neuronal connectivity and receptor density, and of note is the high variability of brain size even in narrowly defined groups, for example children at the same age may have as much as a 50% differences in total brain volume.{{pmid|18346658}} | |||
Significant dynamic changes in brain structure take place through adulthood and aging, with substantial variation between individuals. In later decades, men show greater volume loss in whole brain volume and in the frontal lobes, and temporal lobes, whereas in women there is increased volume loss in the hippocampi and parietal lobes.{{pmid|17544382}} Men show a steeper decline in global gray matter volume, although in both sexes it varies by region with some areas exhibiting little or no age effect. Overall white matter volume does not appear to decline with age, although there is variation between brain regions.{{pmid|11525331}} | Significant dynamic changes in brain structure take place through adulthood and aging, with substantial variation between individuals. In later decades, men show greater volume loss in whole brain volume and in the frontal lobes, and temporal lobes, whereas in women there is increased volume loss in the hippocampi and parietal lobes.{{pmid|17544382}} Men show a steeper decline in global gray matter volume, although in both sexes it varies by region with some areas exhibiting little or no age effect. Overall white matter volume does not appear to decline with age, although there is variation between brain regions.{{pmid|11525331}} |