2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2009.05.029
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The evolution of social learning rules: Payoff-biased and frequency-dependent biased transmission

Abstract: International audienceHumans and other animals do not use social learning indiscriminately, rather, natural selection has favoured the evolution of social learning rules that make selective use of social learning to acquire relevant information in a changing environment. We present a gene-culture coevolutionary analysis of a small selection of such rules (unbiased social learning, payoff-biased social learning and frequency-dependent biased social learning, including conformism and anti-conformism) in a popula… Show more

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Cited by 160 publications
(157 citation statements)
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“…Nakahashi [26], Wakano and Aoki [35] and Kendal et al [19] all challenged aspects of Henrich and Boyd's findings, by reporting a negative relationship between the stability of the environment and the reliance on conformist bias. The reliance on conformity tends to be larger when the cycle of environmental change is shorter (i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Nakahashi [26], Wakano and Aoki [35] and Kendal et al [19] all challenged aspects of Henrich and Boyd's findings, by reporting a negative relationship between the stability of the environment and the reliance on conformist bias. The reliance on conformity tends to be larger when the cycle of environmental change is shorter (i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Examples of cultural traits that are likely to exhibit frequencydependent transmission are fashion trends (89), career choices (12), and baby names (90). Conformist transmission is likely to dominate when the environment is relatively stable and common cultural traits are well adapted to that environment (86,91).…”
Section: Nonrandom Assortment and Biased Transmissionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of this, social learning and its grouplevel consequences have been the object of considerable scientific scrutiny. Laboratory studies and theoretical models have gone hand-in-hand in respectively identifying the social learning strategies that people use (15)(16)(17)(18) and determining how these different strategies are shaped by selection (19)(20)(21) and affect the outcome of cultural evolution (22)(23)(24)(25)(26). The framework of cultural evolution has been successfully applied for a range of purposes, such as understanding the spread and the loss of technologies in human societies (27,28) and inferring the ancestry of cultural traits such as language and political organization (29)(30)(31).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%