In this thesis I examine cognitive capacities which may explain human propensity for cumulative culture, and its near absence in nonhumans. Although the potential importance of human-unique cognition has been discussed in the literature, the particular capacities responsible remain unknown. Adults show cumulative culture, therefore any capacities implicated are expected to develop during childhood. I thus take a developmental approach (in children aged 3-10): across four experimental studies, I investigate whether children’s use of social information, and thus potential for cumulative culture, changes in line with the development of human-unique cognitive capacities. The first research strand utilised a novel experimental approach to examin...
Funding information: H2020 European Research Council, Grant/Award Number: 648841 RATCHETCOGIn the cu...
In the current literature, there are few experimental tests of capacities for cumulative cultural ev...
KHB: PhD studentship funded by the Division of Psychology, University of Stirling. CAC: 648841 RATCH...
This thesis aimed to contribute to the existing literature exploring distinctively human cognitive m...
This project used experiments to examine the cognitive processes that make human culture possible us...
In humans, cultural evolutionary processes are capable of shaping our cognition, because the concept...
Human cumulative culture has been suggested to depend on human-unique cognitive mechanisms, explaini...
In humans, cultural evolutionary processes are capable of shaping our cognition, because the concept...
A variety of different proposals have attempted to explain the apparent uniqueness of human cumulati...
A variety of different proposals have attempted to explain the apparent uniqueness of human cumulati...
Open access journalThe cumulative nature of human culture is unique in the animal kingdom. Progressi...
There is something extraordinary about human culture. The striking complexity of our technologies, i...
In humans, cultural traditions often change in ways which increase efficiency and functionality. Thi...
In humans, cultural traditions often change in ways which increase efficiency and functionality. Thi...
In the current literature, there are few experimental tests of capacities for cumulative cultural ev...
Funding information: H2020 European Research Council, Grant/Award Number: 648841 RATCHETCOGIn the cu...
In the current literature, there are few experimental tests of capacities for cumulative cultural ev...
KHB: PhD studentship funded by the Division of Psychology, University of Stirling. CAC: 648841 RATCH...
This thesis aimed to contribute to the existing literature exploring distinctively human cognitive m...
This project used experiments to examine the cognitive processes that make human culture possible us...
In humans, cultural evolutionary processes are capable of shaping our cognition, because the concept...
Human cumulative culture has been suggested to depend on human-unique cognitive mechanisms, explaini...
In humans, cultural evolutionary processes are capable of shaping our cognition, because the concept...
A variety of different proposals have attempted to explain the apparent uniqueness of human cumulati...
A variety of different proposals have attempted to explain the apparent uniqueness of human cumulati...
Open access journalThe cumulative nature of human culture is unique in the animal kingdom. Progressi...
There is something extraordinary about human culture. The striking complexity of our technologies, i...
In humans, cultural traditions often change in ways which increase efficiency and functionality. Thi...
In humans, cultural traditions often change in ways which increase efficiency and functionality. Thi...
In the current literature, there are few experimental tests of capacities for cumulative cultural ev...
Funding information: H2020 European Research Council, Grant/Award Number: 648841 RATCHETCOGIn the cu...
In the current literature, there are few experimental tests of capacities for cumulative cultural ev...
KHB: PhD studentship funded by the Division of Psychology, University of Stirling. CAC: 648841 RATCH...