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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 7, 2026

A Method for Investigating Age-related Differences in the Functional Connectivity of Cognitive Control Networks Associated with Dimensional Change Card Sort Performance
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The slow process: a hypothetical cognitive adaptation for distributed cognitive networks.

Merlin Donald1

  • 1Department of Psychology & Education, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. donalm@queensu.ca

Journal of Physiology, Paris
|February 19, 2008
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Human cognitive evolution features unique mindsharing cultures and brains adapted for them. A proposed "slow process" neural mechanism enables complex social event comprehension, differentiating human cognition.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Evolutionary Psychology
  • Anthropology

Background:

  • Human cognitive evolution presents unique traits not seen in other primates.
  • These include cooperative cultures forming distributed cognitive networks.
  • The human brain is specifically adapted to function within these networks.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose a hypothetical neural process, the "slow process," underlying human brain adaptation.
  • To explain how this process facilitates comprehension of complex, long-duration social events.
  • To differentiate human cognitive capabilities from those of other primates, like bonobos and chimpanzees.

Main Methods:

  • Theoretical proposal of a neural mechanism (the "slow process").
  • Analysis of cognitive time zones (working memory vs. intermediate time zone).
  • Comparison of human social cognition with primate capabilities.

Main Results:

  • The "slow process" operates in the background, supporting an "intermediate" time zone for comprehending events over hours.
  • This contrasts with the shorter time zones typically managed by other mammals.
  • Human adults utilize this intermediate time zone for planning and imagination, exceeding primate capacity.

Conclusions:

  • Human cognition has both individual and collective dimensions, relying on cognitive-cultural networks (CCNs).
  • The human brain requires cultural input for cognitive development and accessing knowledge.
  • The postulated "slow process" is a top-down executive function crucial for managing cultural connections and complex distributed systems.