Variable Cultural Acquisition Costs Constrain Cumulative Cultural Evolution
Authored by Alex Mesoudi
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0018239
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Platforms:
C++
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Abstract
One of the hallmarks of the human species is our capacity for cumulative
culture, in which beneficial knowledge and technology is accumulated
over successive generations. Yet previous analyses of cumulative
cultural change have failed to consider the possibility that as cultural
complexity accumulates, it becomes increasingly costly for each new
generation to acquire from the previous generation. In principle this
may result in an upper limit on the cultural complexity that can be
accumulated, at which point accumulated knowledge is so costly and
time-consuming to acquire that further innovation is not possible. In
this paper I first review existing empirical analyses of the history of
science and technology that support the possibility that cultural
acquisition costs may constrain cumulative cultural evolution. I then
present macroscopic and individual-based models of cumulative cultural
evolution that explore the consequences of this assumption of variable
cultural acquisition costs, showing that making acquisition costs vary
with cultural complexity causes the latter to reach an upper limit above
which no further innovation can occur. These models further explore the
consequences of different cultural transmission rules (directly biased, indirectly biased and unbiased transmission), population size, and
cultural innovations that themselves reduce innovation or acquisition
costs.
Tags
Demography
imitation
growth
Experimental simulation
Scope