International audienceIn this article, we model cultural knowledge as a capital in which individuals invest at a cost. To this end, following other models of cultural evolution, we explicitly consider the investments made by individuals in culture as life history decisions. Our aim is to understand what then determines the dynamics of cultural accumulation. We show that culture can accumulate provided it improves the efficiency of people's lives in such a way as to increase their productivity or, said differently, provided the knowledge created by previous generations improves the ability of subsequent generations to invest in new knowledge. Our central message is that this positive feedback allowing cultural accumulation can occur for many...
While the accumulation of human capital is widely recognized as a key driver of economic development...
Is the paradise of effortless communication the ideal environment for knowledge creation? Or, can th...
In this paper I argue, first, that human lifeways depend on cognitive capital that has typically bee...
International audienceIn this article, we model cultural knowledge as a capital in which individuals...
Purpose: Despite the growing literature aimed at explaining how cultural and artistic production fee...
Purpose: Despite the growing literature aimed at explaining how cultural and artistic production fee...
One of the hallmarks of the human species is our capacity for cumulative culture, in which beneficia...
Recent literature in the field of cultural economics highlights a possible inversion in the usual ca...
Historical records show that culture can increase exponentially in time, e.g., in number of poems...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Public Library of Science via the DOI in th...
We construct an endogenous growth model that includes a cultural variable along the dimension of ind...
Recent economic growth theory has suggested that wealth differences across nations must be due, at l...
Human culture is the accumulation and evolution of results produced by countless design exercises. H...
This paper begins by calling attention to a puzzling feature of our deep past: an apparent mis-match...
Cumulative cultural evolution (CCE)—defined as the process by which beneficial modifications are cul...
While the accumulation of human capital is widely recognized as a key driver of economic development...
Is the paradise of effortless communication the ideal environment for knowledge creation? Or, can th...
In this paper I argue, first, that human lifeways depend on cognitive capital that has typically bee...
International audienceIn this article, we model cultural knowledge as a capital in which individuals...
Purpose: Despite the growing literature aimed at explaining how cultural and artistic production fee...
Purpose: Despite the growing literature aimed at explaining how cultural and artistic production fee...
One of the hallmarks of the human species is our capacity for cumulative culture, in which beneficia...
Recent literature in the field of cultural economics highlights a possible inversion in the usual ca...
Historical records show that culture can increase exponentially in time, e.g., in number of poems...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Public Library of Science via the DOI in th...
We construct an endogenous growth model that includes a cultural variable along the dimension of ind...
Recent economic growth theory has suggested that wealth differences across nations must be due, at l...
Human culture is the accumulation and evolution of results produced by countless design exercises. H...
This paper begins by calling attention to a puzzling feature of our deep past: an apparent mis-match...
Cumulative cultural evolution (CCE)—defined as the process by which beneficial modifications are cul...
While the accumulation of human capital is widely recognized as a key driver of economic development...
Is the paradise of effortless communication the ideal environment for knowledge creation? Or, can th...
In this paper I argue, first, that human lifeways depend on cognitive capital that has typically bee...