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1.
Nature ; 628(8008): 497, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38600203
2.
Child Dev ; 95(4): 1161-1171, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38108221

RESUMO

Costly rituals are ubiquitous and adaptive. Yet, little is known about how children develop to acquire them. The current study examined children's imitation of costly rituals. Ninety-three 4-6 year olds (47 girls, 45% Oceanians, tested in 2022) were shown how to place tokens into a tube to earn stickers, using either a ritualistic or non-ritualistic costly action sequence. Children shown the ritualistic actions imitated faithfully at the expense of gaining stickers; conversely, those shown the non-ritualistic actions ignored them and obtained maximum reward. This highlights how preschool children are adept at and motivated to learn rituals, despite significant material cost. This study provides insights into the early development of cultural learning and the adaptive value of rituals in group cognition.


Assuntos
Comportamento Ritualístico , Desenvolvimento Infantil , Humanos , Feminino , Masculino , Pré-Escolar , Criança , Desenvolvimento Infantil/fisiologia , Comportamento Imitativo/fisiologia , Comportamento Infantil/fisiologia
3.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 214: 105307, 2022 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34775162

RESUMO

Humans have adapted well to diverse environments in part because of their ability to efficiently acquire information from their social environment. However, we still know very little as to how young children acquire cultural knowledge and in particular the circumstances under which children prioritize social learning over asocial learning. In this study, we asked whether children will selectively adopt either a majority-biased or payoff-biased social learning strategy in the presence or absence of asocial learning. The 3- to 5-year-olds (N = 117) were first shown a video in which four other children took turns in retrieving a capsule housing a reward from one of two boxes. Three of the children (the "majority") retrieved a capsule from the same box, and a single individual (the "minority") retrieved a capsule from the alternative box. Across four conditions, we manipulated both the value of the rewards available in each box (equal or unequal payoff) and whether children had knowledge of the payoff before making their own selection. Results show that children adopted a majority-biased learning strategy when they were unaware of the value of the rewards available but adopted a payoff-biased strategy when the payoff was known to be unequal. We conclude that children are strategic social learners who integrate both social and asocial learning to maximize personal gain.


Assuntos
Aprendizado Social , Viés , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Humanos , Aprendizagem , Recompensa , Incerteza
4.
Behav Brain Sci ; 45: e273, 2022 11 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36353898

RESUMO

The principal contrasts that Jagiello et al. highlight are among many cultural transmission biases we now know of. I suggest they are also reflected more widely in social learning decisions among nonhuman animal cultures governing whether cultural innovations spread, or are instead over-ridden by immigrants' conformity in their new group. Such conformity may serve either informational or social-integrative functions.


Assuntos
Emigrantes e Imigrantes , Aprendizado Social , Animais , Humanos , Conformidade Social , Comportamento Social
5.
Proc Biol Sci ; 288(1949): 20202718, 2021 04 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33878919

RESUMO

A key goal of conservation is to protect biodiversity by supporting the long-term persistence of viable, natural populations of wild species. Conservation practice has long been guided by genetic, ecological and demographic indicators of risk. Emerging evidence of animal culture across diverse taxa and its role as a driver of evolutionary diversification, population structure and demographic processes may be essential for augmenting these conventional conservation approaches and decision-making. Animal culture was the focus of a ground-breaking resolution under the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS), an international treaty operating under the UN Environment Programme. Here, we synthesize existing evidence to demonstrate how social learning and animal culture interact with processes important to conservation management. Specifically, we explore how social learning might influence population viability and be an important resource in response to anthropogenic change, and provide examples of how it can result in phenotypically distinct units with different, socially learnt behavioural strategies. While identifying culture and social learning can be challenging, indirect identification and parsimonious inferences may be informative. Finally, we identify relevant methodologies and provide a framework for viewing behavioural data through a cultural lens which might provide new insights for conservation management.


Assuntos
Biodiversidade , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Animais , Animais Selvagens , Evolução Biológica , Aprendizagem
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(30): 7790-7797, 2017 Jul 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28739927

RESUMO

Discoveries about the cultures and cultural capacities of the great apes have played a leading role in the recognition emerging in recent decades that cultural inheritance can be a significant factor in the lives not only of humans but also of nonhuman animals. This prominence derives in part from these primates being those with whom we share the most recent common ancestry, thus offering clues to the origins of our own thoroughgoing reliance on cumulative cultural achievements. In addition, the intense research focus on these species has spawned an unprecedented diversity of complementary methodological approaches, the results of which suggest that cultural phenomena pervade the lives of these apes, with potentially major implications for their broader evolutionary biology. Here I review what this extremely broad array of observational and experimental methodologies has taught us about the cultural lives of chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans and consider the ways in which this knowledge extends our wider understanding of primate biology and the processes of adaptation and evolution that shape it. I address these issues first by evaluating the extent to which the results of cultural inheritance echo a suite of core principles that underlie organic Darwinian evolution but also extend them in new ways and then by assessing the principal causal interactions between the primary, genetically based organic processes of evolution and the secondary system of cultural inheritance that is based on social learning from others.

7.
Behav Brain Sci ; 43: e182, 2020 08 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32772987

RESUMO

The authors do the field of cultural evolution a service by exploring the role of non-social cognition in human cumulative technological culture, truly neglected in comparison with socio-cognitive abilities frequently assumed to be the primary drivers. Some specifics of their delineation of the critical factors are problematic, however. I highlight recent chimpanzee-human comparative findings that should help refine such analyses.


Assuntos
Evolução Cultural , Humanos , Tecnologia
8.
Behav Brain Sci ; 43: e118, 2020 05 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32460947

RESUMO

Discoveries about social learning and culture in non-human animals have burgeoned this century, yet despite aspiring to offer a unified account of culture, the target article neglects these discoveries almost totally. I offer an overview of principal findings in this field including phylogenetic reach, intraspecies pervasiveness, stability, fidelity, and attentional funnelling in social learning. Can the authors' approach accommodate these?


Assuntos
Aprendizado Social , Animais , Atenção , Filogenia
9.
Nature ; 554(7692): 303-304, 2018 02 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29446385
10.
Nature ; 554(7692): 303-304, 2018 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32094752
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