Abstract

Our species is characterized by a great degree of cultural variation, both within and between populations. Understanding how group-level patterns of culture emerge from individual-level behaviour is a long-standing question in the biological and social sciences. We develop a simulation model capturing demographic and cultural dynamics relevant to human cultural evolution, focusing on the interface between population-level patterns and individual-level processes. The model tracks the distribution of variants of cultural traits across individuals in a population over time, conditioned on different pathways for the transmission of information between individuals. From these data, we obtain theoretical expectations for a range of statistics commonly used to capture population-level characteristics (e.g. the degree of cultural diversity). Consistent with previous theoretical work, our results show that the patterns observed at the level of groups are rooted in the interplay between the transmission pathways and the age structure of the population. We also explore whether, and under what conditions, the different pathways can be distinguished based on their group-level signatures, in an effort to establish theoretical limits to inference. Our results show that the temporal dynamic of cultural change over time retains a stronger signature than the cultural composition of the population at a specific point in time. Overall, the results suggest a shift in focus from identifying the one individual-level process that likely produced the observed data to excluding those that likely did not. We conclude by discussing the implications for empirical studies of human cultural evolution.

Highlights

  • Our species is characterized by a great degree of cultural variation, both within and between populations

  • Our results show that the temporal dynamic of cultural change over time retains a stronger signature than the cultural composition of the population at a specific point in time

  • The mathematical framework tracks the frequencies of trait variants at each time step. We use this information to characterize the cultural composition of the population and the dynamic of cultural change over time, conditioned on the different transmission modes

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Summary

Introduction

Our species is characterized by a great degree of cultural variation, both within and between populations. The model tracks the distribution of variants of cultural traits across individuals in a population over time, conditioned on different pathways for the transmission of information between individuals. From these data, we obtain theoretical expectations for a range of statistics commonly used to capture population-level characteristics (e.g. the degree of cultural diversity). [7,8]), but the scope extends to non-human culture [9] Overall, this body of work has identified a number of factors shaping cultural variation within and across human groups, including the pathways for the transmission of information between individuals, demography, shared population history and adaptation to environmental conditions. How exactly does the group-level ‘signature’ of vertical transmission differ from that of other transmission pathways? And is it sufficiently different that it can be mapped, unequivocally, onto vertical transmission?

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