Diet traditions and cumulative cultural processes as side-effects of grouping
Authored by der Post Daniel J van, Paulien Hogeweg
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2007.04.021
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
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Abstract
Social learning and cognitive sophistication are often assumed to be
prerequisites for the origins of culture. In contrast, we studied to
what extent the most simple social influences on individual learning can
support cultural inheritance. We did this using a spatial
individual-based model where group foragers have to learn what to eat in
a diverse patchy environment, and used simple population dynamics to
investigate the potential of `merely living in groups' to allow for
inheritance of diet traditions. Our results show that grouping by itself
is a sufficient social influence on individual learning for supporting
the inheritance of diet traditions. Unexpectedly, we find that grouping
is also sufficient to generate cumulative group-level learning through
which groups increase diet quality over the generations. Whether
`traditions' or `progressive change' dominates depends on foraging
selectivity. We show that these cultural phenomena can arise as
side-effects of grouping and therefore independently of their adaptive
consequences. This suggests that cultural phenomena could be quite
general and shows that cumulative cultural processes already occur even
for the most simple social influences on learning. (C) 2007 The
Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier
Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Evolution
Food