Evolution of the human brain My two previous papers have dealt with the interaction between neurobiology and genetics, but I have not completely solved this problem. Therefore we will address this complex biological problem related to how our genes shape our brain once again. My first paper is about the relationship between natural farming controversy and the brain's behavioral problems raised in the classroom. Then in the second paper, I looked at the narrower problem in neurogenetics; I am aware of fragile X syndrome and how specific gene mutations can dramatically change behavioral output I wrote about.
The purpose of this paper is to examine the evolution of the human brain from other species based on language, complexity of emotion, and a characteristic of consciousness. The importance of property is due to human adaptability to promote the survival of our ancestors. - The development of drug carriers and delivery systems to increase delivery to the brain has been the subject of much research work both now and hereafter. Most methods for enhancing drug delivery to the brain are focused on avoiding one major obstacle, the blood brain barrier (BBB). The blood-brain barrier consists primarily of brain capillary endothelial cells and is a highly selective barrier of endogenous and exogenous substances (Lai et al., 2013).
Brain swelling during human evolution is dramatic. In the first 4 million years of human evolution, the size of the brain grew very slowly. Consistent with the world's strongest climate change, brain redness to the body size or brain evolution was particularly evident in the past 800,000 years. Larger brains allow humans to process and store information and to plan and resolve abstract problems in advance. According to the variable selection hypothesis, the brain that can provide a universal solution to new and diverse living tasks is beneficial in expanding the range of environments that humans face in time and space.