Ohtsuki Hisashi, Wakano Joe Yuichiro, Kobayashi Yutaka
Department of Evolutionary Studies of Biosystems, School of Advanced Sciences, SOKENDAI (The Graduate University for Advanced Studies), Shonan Village, Hayama, Kanagawa 240-0193, Japan.
School of Interdisciplinary Mathematical Sciences, Meiji University, Nakano, Tokyo 164-8525, Japan.
Theor Popul Biol. 2017 Jun;115:13-23. doi: 10.1016/j.tpb.2017.03.001. Epub 2017 Mar 16.
The success of humans on the globe is largely supported by our cultural excellence. Our culture is cumulative, meaning that it is improved from generation to generation. Previous works have revealed that two modes of learning, individual learning and social learning, play pivotal roles in the accumulation of culture. However, under the trade-off between learning and reproduction, one's investment into learning is easily exploited by those who copy the knowledge of skillful individuals and selfishly invest more efforts in reproduction. It has been shown that in order to prevent such a breakdown, the rate of vertical transmission (i.e. transmission from parents to their offspring) of culture must be unrealistically close to one. Here we investigate what if the population is spatially structured. In particular, we hypothesize that spatial structure should favor highly cumulative culture through endogenously arising high kinship. We employ Wright's island model and assume that cultural transmission occurs within a local island. Our inclusive fitness analysis reveals combined effects of direct fitness of the actor, indirect fitness through relatives in the current generation, and indirect fitness through relatives in future generations. The magnitude of those indirect benefits is measured by intergenerational coefficients of genetic relatedness. Our result suggests that the introduction of spatial structure raises the stationary level of culture in the population, but that the extent of its improvement compared with a well-mixed population is marginal unless spatial localization is extreme. Overall, our model implies that we need an alternative mechanism to explain highly cumulative culture of modern humans.
人类在地球上的成功很大程度上得益于我们卓越的文化。我们的文化是累积性的,也就是说它会代代相传并不断进步。先前的研究表明,个体学习和社会学习这两种学习方式在文化积累过程中起着关键作用。然而,在学习与繁衍之间的权衡中,一个人在学习上的投入很容易被那些抄袭熟练个体知识并将更多精力自私地投入到繁衍中的人利用。研究表明,为了防止这种崩溃,文化的垂直传播率(即从父母传给后代的比率)必须不切实际地接近1。在这里,我们研究如果种群具有空间结构会怎样。具体来说,我们假设空间结构应通过内生产生的高亲缘关系来促进高度累积的文化。我们采用赖特岛模型,并假设文化传播发生在一个局部岛屿内。我们的广义适合度分析揭示了行为者的直接适合度、当代亲属的间接适合度以及后代亲属的间接适合度的综合影响。这些间接益处的大小由遗传相关性的代际系数来衡量。我们的结果表明,引入空间结构会提高种群中文化的稳定水平,但与完全混合的种群相比,其改善程度微不足道,除非空间定位非常极端。总体而言,我们的模型意味着我们需要一种替代机制来解释现代人类高度累积的文化。