Kendal Rachel, Hopper Lydia M, Whiten Andrew, Brosnan Sarah F, Lambeth Susan P, Schapiro Steven J, Hoppitt Will
Centre for the Coevolution of Biology and Culture, Anthropology Department, Durham University, UK.
Centre for the Coevolution of Biology and Culture, Anthropology Department, Durham University, UK; Centre for Social Learning and Cognitive Evolution, School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of St. Andrews, UK; Michale E. Keeling Center for Comparative Medicine and Research, UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, USA; Lester E. Fisher Center for the Study & Conservation of Apes, Lincoln Park Zoo, USA.
Evol Hum Behav. 2015 Jan;36(1):65-72. doi: 10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2014.09.002.
Evolutionary theory predicts that natural selection will fashion cognitive biases to guide when, and from whom, individuals acquire social information, but the precise nature of these biases, especially in ecologically valid group contexts, remains unknown. We exposed four captive groups of chimpanzees () to a novel extractive foraging device and, by fitting statistical models, isolated four simultaneously operating transmission biases. These include biases to copy (i) higher-ranking and (ii) expert individuals, and to copy others when (iii) uncertain or (iv) of low rank. High-ranking individuals were relatively un-strategic in their use of acquired knowledge, which, combined with the bias for others to observe them, may explain reports that high innovation rates (in juveniles and subordinates) do not generate a correspondingly high frequency of traditions in chimpanzees. Given the typically low rank of immigrants in chimpanzees, a 'copying dominants' bias may contribute to the observed maintenance of distinct cultural repertoires in neighboring communities despite sharing similar ecology and knowledgeable migrants. Thus, a copying dominants strategy may, as often proposed for conformist transmission, and perhaps in concert with it, restrict the accumulation of traditions within chimpanzee communities whilst maintaining cultural diversity.
进化理论预测,自然选择会塑造认知偏差,以指导个体何时以及从谁那里获取社会信息,但这些偏差的确切性质,尤其是在生态有效的群体环境中,仍然未知。我们让四组圈养的黑猩猩接触一种新型的提取式觅食装置,并通过拟合统计模型,分离出四种同时起作用的传播偏差。这些偏差包括倾向于模仿(i)地位较高的个体和(ii)专家个体,以及在(iii)不确定或(iv)地位较低时模仿他人。地位较高的个体在运用所学知识时相对缺乏策略,这与其他个体倾向于观察他们的偏差相结合,可能解释了有关报告中提到的(在幼年和下属中)高创新率并未在黑猩猩中产生相应高频率传统的现象。鉴于黑猩猩群体中移民通常地位较低,“模仿优势个体”的偏差可能有助于解释为何尽管相邻群落共享相似生态环境且有知识渊博的移民,但仍能观察到不同文化技能集的维持。因此,如同常被认为的遵循从众传播那样,或许与之协同作用,模仿优势个体的策略可能会限制黑猩猩群体内传统的积累,同时维持文化多样性。