2009
DOI: 10.1002/evan.20222
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Cooperative breeding and human cognitive evolution

Abstract: Despite sharing a recent common ancestor, humans are surprisingly different from other great apes. The most obvious discontinuities are related to our cognitive abilities, including language, but we also have a markedly different, cooperative breeding system. Among many nonhuman primates and mammals in general, cooperative breeding is accompanied by psychological changes leading to greater prosociality, which directly enhances performance in social cognition. Here we propose that these cognitive consequences o… Show more

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Cited by 490 publications
(439 citation statements)
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“…Comparative studies show that cooperative breeding changes the psychology of primates, and indeed other mammals such as elephants and African wild dogs, when compared to their non-cooperatively breeding sister taxa [46]. These studies imply that cooperative breeding selects for a high social tolerance and prosocial motivations, leading to a marked increase in socio-cognitive abilities [46,47].…”
Section: From Primate Autarky To Human Catallaxy (A) the Hunter -Gathmentioning
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Comparative studies show that cooperative breeding changes the psychology of primates, and indeed other mammals such as elephants and African wild dogs, when compared to their non-cooperatively breeding sister taxa [46]. These studies imply that cooperative breeding selects for a high social tolerance and prosocial motivations, leading to a marked increase in socio-cognitive abilities [46,47].…”
Section: From Primate Autarky To Human Catallaxy (A) the Hunter -Gathmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…These studies imply that cooperative breeding selects for a high social tolerance and prosocial motivations, leading to a marked increase in socio-cognitive abilities [46,47]. What is unique in Homo is that cooperative breeding and the consequent prosocial psychology were added on top of an already existing large-brained ape-like cognitive system, inherited from our earlier hominin (australopithecine) ancestors.…”
Section: From Primate Autarky To Human Catallaxy (A) the Hunter -Gathmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bugnyar et al, 2016;Call & Tomasello, 2008;Fitch et al, 2010;ScottPhillips, 2016;Seyfarth & Cheney, 2016), where the cognitive parallels of pragmatics and theory of mind can clearly be found in ravens. These examples of analogy provide ways to test adaptive hypotheses (e.g., the social intelligence hypothesis of Whiten, 1988 andHumphrey, 1976, or the cooperative breeding hypothesis of Burkart, Hrdy, &van Schaik, 2009 andLukas &Clutton-Brock, 2012)-both introduced with reference to primates-and to explore the mechanistic basis of these abilities in an independently evolved brain.…”
Section: Comparative Cognition and Cognitive Biologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The exploitation of large "packet" food resources that can be divided provides incentives for food sharing [54]. Additionally, provisioning and food sharing probably arose with the adoption of cooperative breeding and substantial meat acquisition among the earlier representatives of the genus Homo [54].…”
Section: The Energy Trade-off Hypothesismentioning
confidence: 99%