It used to be insulting if you were told you had a big head. Now, it turns out — ego, aside — that it might actually be a compliment. A large cranium equals a big brain, researchers say. And if you're struck by Alzheimer's disease, having a dominant dome on your shoulders might help preserve your thinking and memory, a new study shows.
As a general rule, the larger your head circumference measures, the more room there is for brain cells. That means that you've got all those extra neurons waiting like the cavalry in reserve when a brain disease like Alzheimer's strikes, says the study's lead author Dr. Robert Perneczky, a researcher at the Technical University of Munich in Germany.
"These findings add weight to the theory of brain reserve, or individual capacity to withstand changes in the brain," says Perneczky about the new research published in Neurology. "Our findings also underline the importance of optimal brain development early in life, since the brain reaches 93 percent of its final size at age six."
Perneczky says we might be able to prevent some cases of Alzheimer's disease if we could make sure everyone's brain got a chance to develop to its fullest potential. Unfortunately, that news might be a little late for anyone already old enough to be reading about his study.
Perneczky scanned the brains of 270 people with Alzheimer's disease and then measured their skull sizes and tested their thinking abilities. The ones with larger-sized heads did better on tests of memory and cognition.
So, does that mean that mean you should be investigating nursing homes if you have a small head?
Not yet, says Dr. Steven Arnold, a professor of neurology and psychiatry and director of the Penn Memory Center at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
While the German study results are interesting, the tests show a lot of "scatter," says Arnold. Which means that while there is a general trend for larger head size to be protective against mental decline, there are a lot of other factors at work.
As an example of that, Arnold points to Albert Einstein.
"The average male brain is about 1,400 g or 3 lb.," says Arnold. "Albert Einstein's brain was measured after his death at 1,230 g and I think we all agree he was intelligent."
So, clearly there are exceptions to the rule.
Do you worry about the size of your head? Tell us in the comments.
Want more weird health news? Find The Body Odd on Facebook.


This is great news to me - since I first learned as a Senior in High School, being measured for my CAP that I had the biggest head in the whole class! Talk about embarrassing - I could only hope it means I have more brain! Actually I graduated with a good grade average - missing - being the Baccalaureate and winning the only scholarship by half a point!
I can never find a hat big enough to fit my head! Now I know there is something good about that!
This makes me happy. My three year old has a rather large head. Always has. I can barely get t-shirts over his head. He already writes his name and boots up the computer at will. The only problem being, he will probably always be smarter than us.
Good chance your three year old will also be an above average size man (or woman--you didn't specify gender).
Well, yes, he's already as tall as his 5 yr. brother.
Well, at first glance I would welcome this as good news since I have a fat head myself. Academically I've done well in my life but I also suffer from seizures and depression. So perhaps having too much of a good thing may not be so good after all.
Hal9000- (love the name reference, btw.)
I have a very large Irish head (we joke about Irish head size) and have never been able to find hats. I suffered from childhood seizures and have a previous history of depression. Strange to find someone else with a large head sharing these similarities.
Melissa
This article is simply baloney. I know first hand of a number of exceptions plus I read an article that said that large heads in children are often indications of lower than average intelligence.
Both things can't be true.
This opinion must come from a college student who had to do a study for her degree. I see a lot of these poorly done studies published on the web and most of them are nonsense.
The article is about memory not intelligence so I don't understand why the author mentioned Einstein's intelligence and the size of his brain. Â The two are not the same. Â I'm married to a very intelligent man with a small head who experiences memory problems. Â