Abstract

Culturally transmitted traits that have deleterious effects on health-related traits can be regarded as cultural pathogens. A cultural pathogen can produce coupled dynamics with its associated health-related traits, so that understanding the dynamics of a health-related trait benefits from consideration of the dynamics of the associated cultural pathogen. Here, we treat anti-vaccine sentiment as a cultural pathogen, modelling its 'infection' dynamics with the infection dynamics of the associated vaccine-preventable disease. In a coupled susceptible-infected-resistant (SIR) model, consisting of an SIR model for the anti-vaccine sentiment and an interacting SIR model for the infectious disease, we explore the effect of anti-vaccine sentiment on disease dynamics. We find that disease endemism is contingent on the presence of the sentiment, and that presence of sentiment can enable diseases to become endemic when they would otherwise have disappeared. Furthermore, the sentiment dynamics can create situations in which the disease suddenly returns after a long period of dormancy. We study the effect of assortative sentiment-based interactions on the dynamics of sentiment and disease, identifying a tradeoff whereby assortative meeting aids the spread of a disease but hinders the spread of sentiment. Our results can contribute to finding strategies that reduce the impact of a cultural pathogen on disease, illuminating the value of cultural evolutionary modelling in the analysis of disease dynamics.

Highlights

  • Models of cultural evolution examine the dynamics of cultural traits in populations in a manner similar to that of population-genetics studies of the dynamics of genetic variants (Cavalli-Sforza & Feldman, 1981; Boyd & Richerson, 1985; Mesoudi, Whiten, & Laland, 2006)

  • We have studied a model of the joint dynamics of anti-vaccine sentiment and a vaccine-preventable disease, modelling the sentiment as a contagion itself: a cultural pathogen

  • Mathematical models of cultural evolution recognized the connection between cultural evolution and disease-transmission models, such as in analogies to susceptible, infected and resistant states for being unaware of a cultural trait, aware of the trait and having adopted the trait (Cavalli-Sforza & Feldman, 1981)

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Summary

Introduction

Models of cultural evolution examine the dynamics of cultural traits in populations in a manner similar to that of population-genetics studies of the dynamics of genetic variants (Cavalli-Sforza & Feldman, 1981; Boyd & Richerson, 1985; Mesoudi, Whiten, & Laland, 2006). Such models make use of analogous but distinct mechanisms of transmission for cultural and biological characters, as well as analogues of population-genetic processes such as mutation and natural selection. Note that our sense of a cultural pathogen is similar to treatments of maladaptive cultural traits in evolutionary models (e.g. Cavalli-Sforza & Feldman, 1981; Boyd & Richerson, 1985); unlike in these treatments, we consider the consequences of the cultural trait not on biological fitness but on a specific aspect of health

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