Well, Paleophil and I found out that the Inuit have the largest skull size on average among ethnic groups. Maybe that means something. Yet that would mean that vegan Hindus had the smallest average brain-size, but that does not seem to be the case, last I checked. There have also been claims that the very last spurt in brain-size ocurred with the advent of cooking c.400,000 years ago, yet other researcher point to 250,000 to 300,000 years ago as the more likely advent of cooking due to the appearance of hearths.Plus, in the neolithic era, Mankind ate far more cooked foods as a proportion of the diet yet developed reduced brain-size.
From the evidence of anthropologists, the evidence seems to be that the decrease in brain-size was uniform across Mankind(I have only seen assertions by anthropologists, I have not seen any actual pubmed article, afaik). What I find interesting is that the Neanderthals had far bigger brains than humans yet had the same body-mass(ie a higher encephalisation quotient)(ie stockier body but shorter heights on average).
My view is that diet is not that essential. I mean it is true that carnivores generally are more intelligent than herbivores but that is because higher intelligence is needed in order to hunt prey than to eat plants.However, Wrangham's notion sounds better :- namely, that when wild animals are domesticated, then after several generations, the descendants have 10% smaller brains on average than their wild ancestors and also have lower testosterone levels. The idea being that higher intelligence is exchanged, to some extent, for increased social cooperation.
Another theory is the natural selection theory, that increased social cooperation in the Neolithic era allowed those with mediocre IQ to survive and breed when they would otherwise have died out.If that is correct, then the relevant scientists claim that in 10,000 years we will have, at most, the average brain-size of homo erectus. I tend to this theory as I consider that intelligence is linked to how much one uses it. In other words, that not only natural selection but, more importantly, epigenetics play a role in increasing intelligence.So, ie "use it or lose it". It frightens me to see more and more humans just pushing buttons or using calculators rather than using their brains etc.