“…This theoretical research provides clear predictions about when individuals, both human and non-human, should rely on their individual or asocial experience and when they should deploy one or more social learning strategies, such as conformist transmission (a tendency to disproportionately copy the majority or plurality). By contrast, relatively little empirical research has sought to directly test these models in the laboratory with human participants, though key exceptions with adult participants include McElreath, et al (2005), Efferson, et al (2008), and Morgan, et al (2012) and with children include Wood, Kendal, and Flynn (2013), Haun, Rekers, and Tomasello (2012), Chudek, Brosseau-Liard, Birch, and Henrich (2013), and Morgan, Laland, and Harris (2014). Here, we aim to advance this research program empirically by testing some novel predictions and implications derived from existing theoretical work, as well as to replicate some prior results in new and more diverse populations.…”