Faust Katerina M, Carouso-Peck Samantha, Elson Mary R, Goldstein Michael H
Department of Psychology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853, USA.
Annu Rev Dev Psychol. 2020 Dec;2:225-246. doi: 10.1146/annurev-devpsych-051820-121446. Epub 2020 Sep 21.
Human infants are altricial, born relatively helpless and dependent on parental care for an extended period of time. This protracted time to maturity is typically regarded as a necessary epiphenomenon of evolving and developing large brains. We argue that extended altriciality is itself adaptive, as a prolonged necessity for parental care allows extensive social learning to take place. Human adults possess a suite of complex social skills, such as language, empathy, morality, and theory of mind. Rather than requiring hardwired, innate knowledge of social abilities, evolution has outsourced the necessary information to parents. Critical information for species-typical development, such as species recognition, may originate from adults rather than from genes, aided by underlying perceptual biases for attending to social stimuli and capacities for statistical learning of social actions. We draw on extensive comparative findings to illustrate that, across species, altriciality functions as an adaptation for social learning from caregivers.
人类婴儿是晚成雏,出生时相对无助,在很长一段时间内依赖父母照顾。这种延长的成熟时间通常被视为大脑进化和发育过程中必然出现的附带现象。我们认为,延长的晚成性本身具有适应性,因为对父母照顾的长期需求使得广泛的社会学习得以发生。人类成年人拥有一系列复杂的社交技能,如语言、同理心、道德和心理理论。进化并非要求社会能力具备与生俱来的固有知识,而是将必要的信息外包给了父母。物种典型发育的关键信息,如物种识别,可能源自成年人而非基因,这得益于关注社会刺激的潜在感知偏差以及对社会行为进行统计学习的能力。我们利用大量的比较研究结果来说明,在不同物种中,晚成性作为一种从照顾者那里进行社会学习的适应方式发挥着作用。