The Mid-Latitude Seasonal Oscillation Hypothesis posits that millennial-scale climate fluctuations across the 35°–40°N belt constituted the core selective pressure for the emergence of behavioral modernity. This hypothesis is falsifiable: if continuous archaeological records of behavioral modernity are discovered outside the 35°--40°N zone (e.g., low-latitude Africa) with chronologies definitively earlier than the earliest securely dated evidence from within the 35°--40°N belt (including but not limited to East Asian mid-latitude refugia), the hypothesis shall be rejected.¹ However, major evolutionary frameworks lacking micro-level mechanisms are easily reduced to simplistic geo-deterministic correlations, a predicament comparable to Alfred Wegener’s continental drift theory prior to the establishment of plate tectonics. This paper resolves this gap between macro-climatic oscillation and micro-behavioral evolution by constructing a complete neurobiological mechanism: environmental unpredictability acts as a direct selective filter favouring cognitive plasticity. We present three independent lines of empirical evidence. First, cross-species experiments on guppies demonstrate that unpredictable environments promote cognitive flexibility and inhibitory control. Second, paleontological quantitative analysis indicates temperature variance accounts for 52% of cranial capacity variation across the genus Homo; hominin brains in cooler, highly variable climatic phases are on average 10.74% larger than those from warm, stable intervals. Third, archaeological records from the Lantian area of the Chinese Loess Plateau (2.0–0.2 Ma) verify that seasonal landscape variability drove the co-evolution of terrain-oriented strategic cognition and miniaturized lithic toolkits. Collectively, these findings support a unified principle: the mid-latitude oscillation belt did not merely impose environmental stress on early humans. It functioned as a persistent cognitive flexibility filter, translating climatic volatility into adaptive neurobiological changes. Behavioral modernity was not an accidental evolutionary breakthrough, but an inevitable neurocognitive outcome shaped by long-term environmental unpredictability. Note: This falsifiability criterion applies to the entire Mid-Latitude Seasonal Oscillation Hypothesis and its companion papers. Academic critics are welcome to present peer-reviewed empirical evidence that satisfies the above falsification conditions.
Jing Zhang (Thu,) studied this question.