Divide and conquer: intermediate levels of population fragmentation maximize cultural accumulation
Authored by Maxime Derex, Charles Perreault, Robert Boyd
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0062
Sponsors:
John Templeton Foundation
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://figshare.com/collections/Supplementary_material_from_Divide_and_conquer_intermediate_levels_of_population_fragmentation_maximize_cultural_accumulation_/3965859
Abstract
Identifying the determinants of cumulative cultural evolution is a key
issue in the interdisciplinary field of cultural evolution. A widely
held view is that large and well-connected social networks facilitate
cumulative cultural evolution because they promote the spread of useful
cultural traits and prevent the loss of cultural knowledge through
factors such as drift. This view stems from models that focus on the
transmission of cultural information, without considering how new
cultural traits actually arise. In this paper, we review the literature
from various fields that suggest that, under some circumstances,
increased connectedness can decrease cultural diversity and reduce
innovation rates. Incorporating this idea into an agent-based model, we
explore the effect of population fragmentation on cumulative culture and
show that, for a given population size, there exists an intermediate
level of population fragmentation that maximizes the rate of cumulative
cultural evolution. This result is explained by the fact that fully
connected, non-fragmented populations are able to maintain complex
cultural traits but produce insufficient variation and so lack the
cultural diversity required to produce highly complex cultural traits.
Conversely, highly fragmented populations produce a variety of cultural
traits but cannot maintain complex ones. In populations with
intermediate levels of fragmentation, cultural loss and cultural
diversity are balanced in a way that maximizes cultural complexity. Our
results suggest that population structure needs to be taken into account
when investigating the relationship between demography and cumulative
culture.
This article is part of the theme issue `Bridging cultural gaps:
interdisciplinary studies in human cultural evolution'.
Tags
Complexity
Evolution
connectivity
Innovation
Diversity
Demography
Network Structure
Model
technology
Path dependence
Group-size
Cumulative culture
Social
learning
Population structure
Technological trajectory
Cultural homogenization
Cultural convergence