Does Environmental Knowledge Inhibit Hominin Dispersal?
Authored by Andre Costopoulos, Colin D Wren
Date Published: 2015
Sponsors:
John Templeton Foundation
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/4176/releases/1.0.0/
Abstract
We investigated the relationship between the dispersal potential of a
hominin population, its local-scale foraging strategies, and the
characteristics of the resource environment using an agent-based
modeling approach. In previous work we demonstrated that natural
selection can favor a relatively low capacity for assessing and
predicting the quality of the resource environment, especially when the
distribution of resources is highly clustered. That work also suggested
that the more knowledge foraging populations had about their
environment, the less likely they were to abandon the landscape they
know and disperse into novel territory. The present study gives agents
new individual and social strategies for learning about their
environment. For both individual and social learning, natural selection
favors decreased levels of environmental knowledge, particularly in
low-heterogeneity environments. Social acquisition of detailed
environmental knowledge results in crowding of agents, which reduces
available reproductive space and relative fitness. Agents with less
environmental knowledge move away from resource clusters and into areas
with more space available for reproduction. These results suggest that, rather than being a requirement for successful dispersal, environmental
knowledge strengthens the ties to particular locations and significantly
reduces the dispersal potential as a result. The evolved level of
environmental knowledge in a population depends on the characteristics
of the resource environment and affects the dispersal capacity of the
population.
Tags
models
Archaeology
Cultural Transmission
information
Climate-change
Human-evolution
Europe
Experimental simulation
Human-populations
Colonization