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Cultural Diffusion and Social Learning Strategies

Cultural Diffusion and Social Learning Strategies. Advance of a leaned trait. Population: (N 0 , N + ), (Naïve, Informed) Individual Learning (IL) vs Social Learning (SL). Advance of a learned trait. Transition (N 0 , N + )  (N 0 – 1, N + + 1) IL : Rate Constant, Independent of N +

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Cultural Diffusion and Social Learning Strategies

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  1. Cultural DiffusionandSocial Learning Strategies

  2. Advance of a leaned trait Population: (N0, N+), (Naïve, Informed) Individual Learning (IL) vs Social Learning (SL)

  3. Advance of a learned trait Transition (N0, N+)  (N0– 1, N+ + 1) IL: Rate Constant, Independent of N+ SL: Rate, per N0, Increases with N+ SL: Signature of Cultural Diffusion

  4. Individual learning: Cumulative

  5. Social learning: Cumulative

  6. Cultural diffusion: Human examples End of 11th Century: St Robert Founded First Cistercian Abbey Slow Growth in Number 1115: St. Bernard, Abbey at Clairvaux Growth Accelerated 1155: 400 Monasteries

  7. Cistercians in Europe (Grubler 1997)

  8. Cistercians in Europe: Cultural diffusion Monasteries Communicated Advanced innovations Water mill Wool manufacture Agriculture/Land clearing (Deforestation) Cultural Change/Evolution

  9. Opposition to change: Luddites Fear of new technologies 1811-1816: Luddites destroyed textile machinery 1830: Captain Swing, opposition to threshing machines Rapidly advancing cultural values

  10. Captain Swing movement: Social learning

  11. Social learning of technology (Grubler 1997)

  12. Cultural diffusion: Non-human examples Reader & Laland (2000) AnimBehav60:175 Gupppies: Learn Route to Rich Food Patch SL: Following Past Opaque Partition

  13. Reader & Laland (2000) Not signature of social learning? Females copied, and learned faster than did males. Males mixed SL and IL.

  14. Social learning, cultural evolution Common in Humans Demonstrated in Other Species Chimpanzees, Macaques Whale, Bird Song Cultural Adaptation: Change in culture increases survival, fecundity Not as common

  15. Social learning strategies Laland, K. (2004) Learning & Behavior 32:4. Commonly assumed: Capacity for social learning adaptive Gain Information Avoid Cost of Direct Interaction with Environment

  16. Laland, K. (2004) Model, Mimic  Producer, Scrounger (Information) More Social Learners  Reduced Innovation Information on Environment Not as Current More Social Learners  Fewer Individuals Interact Directly with Environment

  17. Laland, K. (2004) Use Social Learning Selectively Mix with Direct Sampling, Trial & Error Need Strategy for Social Learning When? Circumstances for Social Learning? Whom? Which Individuals “Best” Information?

  18. Laland, K. (2004): When? When Established Behavior (No behavior) Unproductive Pigeons: Food in Cartons, Opened by Tearing Paper Initially, Most Scrounge Food Scrounging So Common, Unproductive Then, Individuals Learn Socially to Open Cartons

  19. Laland, K. (2004) When Cost of Asocial Learning High Searching for Resource Patches (vs Following) Risk of Acquiring Poor Information Individual Learning Hazardous Gorillas: Elaborate Processing of Food Plants Avoid Physical Defenses, Chemical Defenses Individual Learning Costly

  20. Laland, K. (2004) When Uncertain Within-Generation Temporal Variation Match Behavior to Current Environment No Obvious Cue to Environment Rats: 2 Novel Foods – Copy Food Choice by Breath Familiar Foods – Little Social Influence on Choice Uncertainty Prompts Social Mimicry

  21. Laland, K. (2004) Copy Whom? Directed Social Learning Identity/Phenotype of Demonstrator Affects Pr[Social Learning] Social Rank Age Association Relatedness Niche

  22. Laland, K. (2004) Copy the Majority (Conformity) Mate Choice Copying (Female Choice) Increase Variance in Rep Success of Other Sex Copy Rare Behavior Starlings, Parrots: Copy Song of Other Species Females Favor Complex Song Repertoire

  23. Laland, K. (2004) Copy Successful Individuals (vs Successful Behavior) Easy; Which Traits Imply Success? Red-Winged Blackbirds: Socially Learn Food Preference, Demonstrator Becomes Sick/Stays Well If Strategy Works, Neutral/Maladaptive Trait May “Hitchhike” with Successful Trait

  24. Laland, K. (2004) Copy Dominants? Lacks Study Copy Best vs Copy Better Cardinal vsOrdinal Copy Good Social Learners (?) Copy Kin – Common in Nature Same Alleles, Same Requirements Advantage

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