Article
Details
Citation
Lucas AJ, Kings M, Whittle D, Davey E, Happé F, Caldwell CA & Thornton A (2020) The value of teaching increases with tool complexity in cumulative cultural evolution. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 287 (1939), Art. No.: 20201885. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.1885
Abstract
Human cumulative cultural evolution (CCE) is recognized as a powerful ecological and evolutionary force, but its origins are poorly understood. The long-standing view that CCE requires specialized social learning processes such as teaching has recently come under question, and cannot explain why such processes evolved in the first place. An alternative, but largely untested, hypothesis is that these processes gradually coevolved with an increasing reliance on complex tools. To address this, we used large-scale transmission chain experiments (624 participants), to examine the role of different learning processes in generating cumulative improvements in two tool types of differing complexity. Both tool types increased in efficacy across experimental generations, but teaching only provided an advantage for the more complex tools. Moreover, while the simple tools tended to converge on a common design, the more complex tools maintained a diversity of designs. These findings indicate that the emergence of cumulative culture is not strictly dependent on, but may generate selection for, teaching. As reliance on increasingly complex tools grew, so too would selection for teaching, facilitating the increasingly open-ended evolution of cultural artefacts.
Keywords
coevolution; cumulative cultural evolution; social learning; teaching; tool-making
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences: Volume 287, Issue 1939
Status | Published |
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Funders | , European Research Council and European Research Council |
Publication date | 25/11/2020 |
Publication date online | 18/11/2020 |
Date accepted by journal | 23/10/2020 |
URL | |
Publisher | The Royal Society |
ISSN | 0962-8452 |
eISSN | 1471-2954 |
People (1)
Professor Christine Anna Caldwell
Professor, Psychology