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狩猎采集者中的知识共享网络与累积文化的演变

Knowledge-Sharing Networks in Hunter-Gatherers and the Evolution of Cumulative Culture.

作者信息

Salali Gul Deniz, Chaudhary Nikhil, Thompson James, Grace Olwen Megan, van der Burgt Xander M, Dyble Mark, Page Abigail E, Smith Daniel, Lewis Jerome, Mace Ruth, Vinicius Lucio, Migliano Andrea Bamberg

机构信息

Department of Anthropology, University College London, London WC1H 0BW, UK.

Department of Anthropology, University College London, London WC1H 0BW, UK.

出版信息

Curr Biol. 2016 Sep 26;26(18):2516-2521. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.07.015. Epub 2016 Sep 8.

Abstract

Humans possess the unique ability for cumulative culture [1, 2]. It has been argued that hunter-gatherer's complex social structure [3-9] has facilitated the evolution of cumulative culture by allowing information exchange among large pools of individuals [10-13]. However, empirical evidence for the interaction between social structure and cultural transmission is scant [14]. Here we examine the reported co-occurrence of plant uses between individuals in dyads (which we define as their "shared knowledge" of plant uses) in BaYaka Pygmies from Congo. We studied reported uses of 33 plants of 219 individuals from four camps. We show that (1) plant uses by BaYaka fall into three main domains: medicinal, foraging, and social norms/beliefs; (2) most medicinal plants have known bioactive properties, and some are positively associated with children's BMI, suggesting that their use is adaptive; (3) knowledge of medicinal plants is mainly shared between spouses and biological and affinal kin; and (4) knowledge of plant uses associated with foraging and social norms is shared more widely among campmates, regardless of relatedness, and is important for camp-wide activities that require cooperation. Our results show the interdependence between social structure and knowledge sharing. We propose that long-term pair bonds, affinal kin recognition, exogamy, and multi-locality create ties between unrelated families, facilitating the transmission of medicinal knowledge and its fitness implications. Additionally, multi-family camps with low inter-relatedness between camp members provide a framework for the exchange of functional information related to cooperative activities beyond the family unit, such as foraging and regulation of social life.

摘要

人类拥有独特的累积文化能力[1,2]。有人认为,狩猎采集者复杂的社会结构[3 - 9]通过允许大量个体之间进行信息交流,促进了累积文化的进化[10 - 13]。然而,社会结构与文化传播之间相互作用的实证证据却很少[14]。在此,我们研究了刚果巴亚卡俾格米人二元组中个体之间所报告的植物用途的共同出现情况(我们将其定义为他们对植物用途的“共享知识”)。我们研究了来自四个营地的219名个体对33种植物的报告用途。我们发现:(1)巴亚卡人对植物的用途主要分为三个主要领域:药用、觅食以及社会规范/信仰;(2)大多数药用植物具有已知的生物活性特性,有些与儿童的体重指数呈正相关,这表明它们的使用具有适应性;(3)药用植物的知识主要在配偶以及血亲与姻亲之间共享;(4)与觅食和社会规范相关的植物用途知识在营地伙伴之间更广泛地共享,无论他们是否有亲属关系,并且对于需要合作的全营地活动很重要。我们的结果显示了社会结构与知识共享之间的相互依存关系。我们提出,长期的配偶关系、姻亲亲属识别、异族通婚和多地居住在不相关的家庭之间建立了联系,促进了药用知识及其适应性影响的传播。此外,营地成员之间亲属关系较低的多家庭营地为与家庭单位之外的合作活动(如觅食和社会生活规范)相关的功能信息交流提供了一个框架。

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