The human kinship system, and its associated terminology, bears the hallmarks of an evolutionary adaptation but its evolutionary origins have not been explored. We argue that the human kinship naming system is a schema that evolved to reduce the cognitive load of maintaining kinships, allowing the expansion of the human network and an increase in survival. We report on the results of two response time studies, using moral dilemmas as a proxy for relationship maintenance, which test the hypothesis. We find qualified support for our argument. Within the 50 layer of the social network kinships do impose less cognitive load than friendships allowing a saving in processing power and an increase in social network size beyond that seen in non-huma...
Evolutionary ecologists have shown that relatives are important providers of support across many spe...
Confusions between substantive and relational concepts of kinship as a social network have led to a ...
The ultimate payoff of behaviours depends not only on their direct impact on an individual, but also...
Why and under what conditions are individuals altruistic to family and friends in their social netwo...
Why and under what conditions are individuals altruistic to family and friends in their social netwo...
Traditional human societies are organised around kinship, and use kinship networks to generate large...
A key change in the evolution of our species from a common ancestor with the chimpanzees was the shi...
prototypical than others. Different kin terminologies draw from the same set of rules, while variati...
Patrilineal kinship structures are among the most complex manifestations of the impact of kinship on...
The fertility decline associated with economic development has been attributed to a host of interrel...
FAMILIES FORM ONE of the most important domains in people’s lives. At the individual level, having g...
Abstract: Research in anthropology has shown that kin terminologies have a complex combinatorial str...
Humans are characterized by an unusual level of prosociality. Despite this, considerable indirect ev...
In the first chapter, I investigate a potential channel to explain the heterogeneity of kin networks...
Kinship terminology is a human universal, a kind of cultural knowledge circulated through language. ...
Evolutionary ecologists have shown that relatives are important providers of support across many spe...
Confusions between substantive and relational concepts of kinship as a social network have led to a ...
The ultimate payoff of behaviours depends not only on their direct impact on an individual, but also...
Why and under what conditions are individuals altruistic to family and friends in their social netwo...
Why and under what conditions are individuals altruistic to family and friends in their social netwo...
Traditional human societies are organised around kinship, and use kinship networks to generate large...
A key change in the evolution of our species from a common ancestor with the chimpanzees was the shi...
prototypical than others. Different kin terminologies draw from the same set of rules, while variati...
Patrilineal kinship structures are among the most complex manifestations of the impact of kinship on...
The fertility decline associated with economic development has been attributed to a host of interrel...
FAMILIES FORM ONE of the most important domains in people’s lives. At the individual level, having g...
Abstract: Research in anthropology has shown that kin terminologies have a complex combinatorial str...
Humans are characterized by an unusual level of prosociality. Despite this, considerable indirect ev...
In the first chapter, I investigate a potential channel to explain the heterogeneity of kin networks...
Kinship terminology is a human universal, a kind of cultural knowledge circulated through language. ...
Evolutionary ecologists have shown that relatives are important providers of support across many spe...
Confusions between substantive and relational concepts of kinship as a social network have led to a ...
The ultimate payoff of behaviours depends not only on their direct impact on an individual, but also...