Zhou W-X, Sornette D, Hill R A, Dunbar R I M
State Key Laboratory of Chemical Reaction Engineering, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai 200237, China.
Proc Biol Sci. 2005 Feb 22;272(1561):439-44. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2004.2970.
The 'social brain hypothesis' for the evolution of large brains in primates has led to evidence for the coevolution of neocortical size and social group sizes, suggesting that there is a cognitive constraint on group size that depends, in some way, on the volume of neural material available for processing and synthesizing information on social relationships. More recently, work on both human and non-human primates has suggested that social groups are often hierarchically structured. We combine data on human grouping patterns in a comprehensive and systematic study. Using fractal analysis, we identify, with high statistical confidence, a discrete hierarchy of group sizes with a preferred scaling ratio close to three: rather than a single or a continuous spectrum of group sizes, humans spontaneously form groups of preferred sizes organized in a geometrical series approximating 3-5, 9-15, 30-45, etc. Such discrete scale invariance could be related to that identified in signatures of herding behaviour in financial markets and might reflect a hierarchical processing of social nearness by human brains.
灵长类动物大脑进化的“社会大脑假说”已得出新皮质大小与社会群体大小共同进化的证据,这表明群体大小存在认知限制,这种限制在某种程度上取决于可用于处理和整合社会关系信息的神经物质的量。最近,针对人类和非人类灵长类动物的研究表明,社会群体通常具有等级结构。我们在一项全面系统的研究中整合了关于人类分组模式的数据。通过分形分析,我们以高统计置信度确定了一个离散的群体大小等级,其偏好的缩放比例接近三:人类并非形成单一或连续的群体大小范围,而是自发地形成偏好大小的群体,这些群体以几何级数排列,近似于3 - 5、9 - 15、30 - 45等等。这种离散的尺度不变性可能与金融市场羊群行为特征中所发现的有关,并且可能反映了人类大脑对社会亲疏关系的分层处理。