Department of Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2R3, Canada.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2023 Jun;30(3):863-881. doi: 10.3758/s13423-022-02236-4. Epub 2023 Jan 6.
Social learning via the observation of or interaction with other individuals can allow animals to obtain information about the local environment. Once social information is obtained, animals may or may not act on and use this information. Animals may learn from others selectively based on particular characteristics (e.g., familiarity, age, dominance) of the information provider, which is thought to maximize the benefits of social learning. Biases to copy certain individuals over others plays an important role in how information is transmitted and used among individuals, and can influence the emergence of group-level behaviors (i.e., traditions). Two underlying factors can affect from whom animals learn: the population social dynamics - with whom you associate (e.g., familiar), and status of the demonstrator (e.g., dominant). We systematically surveyed the literature and conducted a meta-analysis to test whether demonstrator characteristics consistently influence social learning, and if social dynamics strategies differ from status strategies in their influence on social learning. We extracted effect sizes from papers that used an observer-demonstrator paradigm to test if the characteristics of the individual providing social information (i.e., the demonstrator) influence social information use by observers. We obtained 139 effect sizes on 33 species from 54 experiments. First, we found an effect of experimental design on the influence of demonstrator characteristics on social learning: between-subject designs had stronger effects compared to within-subject designs. Second, we found that demonstrator characteristics do indeed influence social learning. Characteristics based on social dynamics and characteristics based on status had a significant effect on social learning, especially when copying familiar and kin demonstrators. These results highlight the role that demonstrator characteristics play on social learning, which can have implications for the formation and establishment of behavioural traditions in animals.
通过观察或与其他个体互动,动物可以获得有关当地环境的信息。一旦获得了社会信息,动物可能会也可能不会对其采取行动并加以利用。动物可能会根据信息提供者的某些特定特征(例如,熟悉度、年龄、支配地位)有选择地从他人那里学习,这被认为可以最大限度地提高社会学习的好处。相对于其他个体,动物对某些个体的模仿偏见在信息在个体之间的传播和利用中起着重要作用,并可以影响群体行为(即传统)的出现。两个潜在因素会影响动物向谁学习:种群社会动态——与谁交往(例如,熟悉),以及示范者的地位(例如,支配地位)。我们系统地查阅了文献,并进行了荟萃分析,以测试示范者特征是否会一致影响社会学习,以及社会动态策略是否会在影响社会学习方面与地位策略有所不同。我们从使用观察者-示范者范式的论文中提取了效果大小,以测试提供社会信息的个体(即示范者)的特征是否会影响观察者对社会信息的使用。我们从 54 项实验中获得了 33 个物种的 139 个效果大小。首先,我们发现实验设计对示范者特征对社会学习的影响存在影响:与被试间设计相比,被试内设计的影响更大。其次,我们发现示范者的特征确实会影响社会学习。基于社会动态的特征和基于地位的特征对社会学习有显著影响,尤其是在模仿熟悉和亲属示范者时。这些结果强调了示范者特征在社会学习中的作用,这可能对动物行为传统的形成和确立产生影响。