Department of Biological and Experimental Psychology, Queen Mary University of London, London, E1 4NS, UK.
Department of Mathematics, Imperial College London, London, SW7 2AZ, UK.
Nat Commun. 2018 Jun 20;9(1):2417. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-04728-1.
Cultural traditions have been observed in a wide variety of animal species. It remains unclear, however, what is required for social learning to give rise to stable traditions: what level of precision and what learning strategies are required. We address these questions by fitting models of cultural evolution to learned bird song. We recorded 615 swamp sparrow (Melospiza georgiana) song repertoires, and compared syllable frequency distributions to the output of individual-based simulations. We find that syllables are learned with an estimated error rate of 1.85% and with a conformist bias in learning. This bias is consistent with a simple mechanism of overproduction and selective attrition. Finally, we estimate that syllable types could frequently persist for more than 500 years. Our results demonstrate conformist bias in natural animal behaviour and show that this, along with moderately precise learning, may support traditions whose stability rivals those of humans.
文化传统在广泛的动物物种中都有被观察到。然而,社会学习要产生稳定的传统需要什么,还不清楚:需要什么样的精度和学习策略。我们通过将文化进化模型拟合到已学的鸟类歌曲来解决这些问题。我们记录了 615 只沼泽麻雀(Melospiza georgiana)的歌曲曲目,并将音节频率分布与基于个体的模拟输出进行了比较。我们发现,音节的学习误差率估计为 1.85%,并且在学习中存在从众偏差。这种偏差与过度生产和选择性损耗的简单机制一致。最后,我们估计音节类型可能经常持续超过 500 年。我们的结果表明,在自然动物行为中存在从众偏差,并且表明这种偏差,以及适度精确的学习,可能支持稳定性可与人类相媲美的传统。