Suzana Herculano-Houzel

Associate Professor of Psychology Vanderbilt University

  • Nashville TN

Neuroscientist and international expert in how brain size and structure affect cognition and longevity in animals.

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Biography

Suzana Herculano-Houzel, P.I. (her.kou.LAH.no.who.ZELL) is Associate Professor of the Departments of Psychology and Biological Sciences at Vanderbilt University since 2016. She was previously an Associate Professor at Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, between 2002-2016.

She majored in Biology at Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (1992), holds an M.Sc. in Neuroscience (Case Western Reserve University, 1995, with Story Landis), and a Ph.D. in Neuroscience (Université Paris VI, 1999, with Yves Frégnac and Max-Planck-Institut for Brain Research, with Wolf Singer). In Brazil, she was a Scientist with the National Research Council (CNPq) from 2007 to 2016; Young Scientist of the State of Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ, 2007-2009) and Scientist of the State of Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ) between 2009 and 2016. In 2010, she was a recipient of the Scholar Award in Understanding Human Cognition, James S. McDonell Foundation.

She is the author of six books (in Portuguese) for the general public on the neuroscience of everyday life, with over 80,000 copies sold, was the writer and presenter of the TV series Neurológica (Fantástico, Rede Globo de Televisão) between 2008 and 2011, and remains a regular writer for the newspaper Folha de São Paulo since 2006.

Areas of Expertise

Evolution
Neuroscience
Cognition and Cognitive Neuroscience
Neurons
Intelligence
Developmental Science
Quantitative Methods
Animal intelligence

Accomplishments

Fall 2019 Public Voices Fellow

A semester-long program designed to expand Vanderbilt University’s global reach by amplifying the impact of faculty academic research.

LARC-IBRO Travel Award, FALAN

2012

Scholar Award in Understanding Human Cognition, James McDonnell Foundation

2010

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Education

Université Pierre

Ph.D.

Neuroscience

1999

Case Western Reserve University

M.Sc.

Neuroscience

1995

Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

B.Sc.

Biology/Genetics

1992

Selected Media Appearances

Do Crows Possess a Form of Consciousness?

Smithsonian  online

2020-09-30

The crows’ neurons “have activity that represents not what was shown to them, but what they later report...to have seen—whether or not that is what they were shown,” Suzana Herculano-Houzel, a neurobiologist at Vanderbilt University who published an analysis of the study in Science, tells Stat. This secondary layer of processing of the visual stimulus occurs in the time between when the stimulus appears on the screen and when the crow pecks its answer.

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Crows Are Self-Aware and 'Know What They Know,' Just Like Humans

Popular Mechanics  online

2020-09-28

In an analysis in the same issue of Science, another researcher, Suzana Herculano-Houzel of Vanderbilt University, makes a critique of the study’s hypothesis. The structure being studied, she says, could resemble another structure because of physical properties more than a shared evolution or an indication of extremely early consciousness. The size of the structures matter a great deal, too.

“[T]he level of that complexity, and the extent to which new meanings and possibilities arise, should still scale with the number of units in the system,” Herculano-Houzel explains. “This would be analogous to the combined achievements of the human species when it consisted of just a few thousand individuals, versus the considerable achievements of 7 billion today.”

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Your big brain makes you human – count your neurons when you count your blessings

The Conversation  online

2019-11-26

Here’s something new to consider being thankful for at the dinner table: the long evolutionary journey that gave you your big brain and your long life.

Courtesy of our primate ancestors that invented cooking over a million years ago, you are a member of the one species able to afford so many cortical neurons in its brain. With them come the extended childhood and the pushing century-long lifespan that together make human beings unique.

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Selected Articles

Embodied (embrained?) cognitive evolution, at last!

Comparative Cognition & Behavior Reviews

Suzana Herculano-Houzel

2018

It is time that brain size stops serving as a black box-type property of brains, "somehow" related to variations in cognitive performance across species. We now know that hidden behind similar brain structure sizes are diverse numbers of neurons and fibers that can differ in function according to experience and environment and that species differences are not a continuation of individual differences.

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Longevity and sexual maturity vary across species with number of cortical neurons, and humans are no exception

The Journal of Comparative Neurology

Suzana Herculano-Houzel

2018

Maximal longevity of endotherms has long been considered to increase with decreasing specific metabolic rate, and thus with increasing body mass. Using a dataset of over 700 species, here I show that maximal longevity, age at sexual maturity and post‐maturity longevity across bird and mammalian species instead correlate primarily, and universally, with the number of cortical brain neurons.

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You Do Not Mess with the Glia

Neuroglia

Suzana Herculano-Houzel, Sandra Dos Santos

2018

Vertebrate neurons are enormously variable in morphology and distribution. While different glial cell types do exist, they are much less diverse than neurons. Over the last decade, we have conducted quantitative studies of the absolute numbers, densities, and proportions at which non-neuronal cells occur in relation to neurons.

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