Transition to farming more likely for small, conservative groups with property rights, but increased productivity is not essential
Authored by Elizabeth M Gallagher, Stephen J Shennan, Mark G Thomas
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1511870112
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Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Theories for the origins of agriculture are still debated, with a range
of different explanations offered. Computational models can be used to
test these theories and explore new hypotheses; Bowles and Choi
{[}Bowles S, Choi J-K (2013) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 110(22):8830-8835]
have developed one such model. Their model shows the coevolution of
farming and farming-friendly property rights, and by including climate
variability, replicates the timings for the emergence of these events
seen in the archaeological record. Because the processes modeled
occurred a long time ago, it can be difficult to justify exact parameter
values; hence, we propose a fitting to idealized outcomes (FIO) method
to explore the model's parameter space in more detail. We have
replicated the model of Bowles and Choi, and used the FIO method to
identify complexities and interactions of the model previously
unidentified. Our results indicate that the key parameters for the
emergence of farming are group structuring, group size, conservatism, and farming-friendly property rights (lending further support to Bowles
and Choi's original proposal). We also find that although advantageous, it is not essential that farming productivity be greater than foraging
productivity for farming to emerge. In addition, we highlight how model
behaviors can be missed when gauging parameter sensitivity via a
fix-all-but-one variation approach.
Tags
Evolution
Cooperation
Culture
health
population
Origins
Domestication
Early agriculture
Early holocene
Plant