Abstract

Human populations show rich cultural diversity. Underpinning this diversity of tools, rituals, and cultural norms are complex interactions between cultural evolutionary and demographic processes. Most models of cultural change assume that individuals use the same learning modes and methods throughout their lives. However, empirical data on ‘learning life histories’—the balance of dominant modes of learning (for example, learning from parents, peers, or unrelated elders) throughout an individual’s lifetime—suggest that age structure may play a crucial role in determining learning modes and cultural evolutionary trajectories. Thus, studied in isolation, demographic and cultural evolutionary models show only part of the picture. This paper describes a mathematical and computational framework that combines demographic and cultural evolutionary methods. Using this general framework, we examine interactions between the ways in which culture is spread throughout an individual’s lifetime and cultural change across generations. We show that including demographic structure alongside cultural dynamics can help to explain domain-specific patterns of cultural evolution that are a persistent feature of cultural data, and can shed new light on rare but significant demographic events.

Highlights

  • IntroductionCultural transmission can occur via multiple modes of learning; for example, an individual can learn from parents (termed vertical transmission), from non-parental adults (oblique transmission), or from peers (horizontal transmission) [1]

  • Human populations show great cultural variety and complexity, which cultural evolutionary theory seeks to explain by applying ideas about evolution to the ways in which cultural traits change over time

  • We combined cultural evolutionary theory with information about how people learn over their lifetimes—changing their role models and teachers as they grow up

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Summary

Introduction

Cultural transmission can occur via multiple modes of learning; for example, an individual can learn from parents (termed vertical transmission), from non-parental adults (oblique transmission), or from peers (horizontal transmission) [1]. Coarse-scale differences in social learning may result from variation in subsistence strategies; for example, Hewlett et al [5] investigated the different learning trajectories of the Aka hunter-gatherers in central Africa and their small-scale agriculturalist neighbors. They showed that the individuals from whom children learn differed by children’s age and by their group’s subsistence strategy. In the hunter-gatherer groups, children’s learning was predominantly vertical, especially before the age of 12, whereas children of small-scale agriculturalists learned primarily horizontally and obliquely, beginning at a much younger age.

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