Active cultural transmission of fitness-enhancing behavior (sometimes called “teaching”) can be seen as a costly strategy: one for which its evolutionary stability poses a Darwinian puzzle. In this article, we offer a biological market model of cultural transmission that substitutes or complements existing kin selection-based proposals for the evolution of cultural capacities. We explicitly demonstrate how a biological market can account for the evolution of teaching when individual learners are the exclusive focus of social learning (such as in a fast-changing environment). We also show how this biological market can affect the dynamics of cumulative culture. The model works best when it is difficult to have access to the observation of th...
The study of culturally inherited traits has led to the suggestion that the evolution of helping beh...
The emergence of human societies with complex language and cumulative culture is considered a major ...
One of the difficulties with cultural group selection theory highlighted in the review by Smith (202...
Active cultural transmission of fitness-enhancing behavior (sometimes called “teaching”) can be seen...
Culture is a hugely important process in the evolution of humans and many non-human animals. Through...
When individuals in a population can acquire traits through learning, each individual may express a ...
This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’...
We study the relationship between genetic evolution, learning, and culture. We start with the simula...
One contribution of 15 to a theme issue ‘Foundations of cultural evolution’ compiled and edited by E...
Human evolution depends on the co-evolution between genetically determined behaviors and socially tr...
Open access journalThe cumulative nature of human culture is unique in the animal kingdom. Progressi...
Humans are unique in the extent and complexity of their cultures. As a species, we generate extensiv...
Theories of language evolution typically attribute its unique structure to pressures acting on the g...
The apparent adaptive value of culture was once assumed to be an explanation for the evolution of so...
Abstract Modes of cultural transmission are, by analogy with modes of genetic transmission, ways in ...
The study of culturally inherited traits has led to the suggestion that the evolution of helping beh...
The emergence of human societies with complex language and cumulative culture is considered a major ...
One of the difficulties with cultural group selection theory highlighted in the review by Smith (202...
Active cultural transmission of fitness-enhancing behavior (sometimes called “teaching”) can be seen...
Culture is a hugely important process in the evolution of humans and many non-human animals. Through...
When individuals in a population can acquire traits through learning, each individual may express a ...
This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’...
We study the relationship between genetic evolution, learning, and culture. We start with the simula...
One contribution of 15 to a theme issue ‘Foundations of cultural evolution’ compiled and edited by E...
Human evolution depends on the co-evolution between genetically determined behaviors and socially tr...
Open access journalThe cumulative nature of human culture is unique in the animal kingdom. Progressi...
Humans are unique in the extent and complexity of their cultures. As a species, we generate extensiv...
Theories of language evolution typically attribute its unique structure to pressures acting on the g...
The apparent adaptive value of culture was once assumed to be an explanation for the evolution of so...
Abstract Modes of cultural transmission are, by analogy with modes of genetic transmission, ways in ...
The study of culturally inherited traits has led to the suggestion that the evolution of helping beh...
The emergence of human societies with complex language and cumulative culture is considered a major ...
One of the difficulties with cultural group selection theory highlighted in the review by Smith (202...