Abstract

The term ‘life-history theory’ (LHT) is increasingly often invoked in psychology, as a framework for integrating understanding of psychological traits into a broader evolutionary context. Although LHT as presented in psychology papers (LHT-P) is typically described as a straightforward extension of the theoretical principles from evolutionary biology that bear the same name (LHT-E), the two bodies of work are not well integrated. Here, through a close reading of recent papers, we argue that LHT-E and LHT-P are different research programmes in the Lakatosian sense. The core of LHT-E is built around ultimate evolutionary explanation, via explicit mathematical modelling, of how selection can drive divergent evolution of populations or species living under different demographies or ecologies. The core of LHT-P concerns measurement of covariation, across individuals, of multiple psychological traits; the proximate goals these serve; and their relation to childhood experience. Some of the links between LHT-E and LHT-P are false friends. For example, elements that are marginal in LHT-E are core commitments of LHT-P, and where explanatory principles are transferred from one to the other, nuance can be lost in transmission. The methodological rules for what grounds a prediction in theory are different in the two cases. Though there are major differences between LHT-E and LHT-P at present, there is much potential for greater integration in the future, through both theoretical modelling and further empirical research.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Life history and learning: how childhood, caregiving and old age shape cognition and culture in humans and other animals’.

Highlights

  • This special issue brings together research from psychology, and learning in particular, with research on life history, which is more typically concerned with growth, physical maturation and senescence

  • life-history theory’ (LHT) originated in evolutionary biology, but in the last 15 years, the term has appeared more and more in the psychology literature, in personality psychology and parts of developmental psychology

  • If present trends continue, it will soon be as frequently encountered in psychology as it is in evolutionary biology

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Summary

Introduction

This special issue brings together research from psychology, and learning in particular, with research on life history, which is more typically concerned with growth, physical maturation and senescence. This leads us to generalizations about what appear to be the core tenets of the research programme in the two cases. Neither tenets (ii) or (iii) necessarily entail that individuals have any plasticity to shift their life-history trait values according to the personal environment This plasticity claim is sometimes made in LHT-E (e.g. in [18]), and there are evolutionary lifehistory models incorporating plasticity [19]. In §§3 and 4 we trace historically how this situation has come to pass, before turning, in §5, to suggestions for the future

Life-history theory in evolutionary biology
Life-history theory in psychology
Prospects for future integration of life-history theory
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