Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, Silberman Institute for Life Science, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 9190401, Israel.
Department of Biological Sciences and Evolutionary Studies Initiative, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37212, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2023 Mar 13;378(1872):20210418. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2021.0418. Epub 2023 Jan 23.
The transition to specialization of knowledge within populations could have facilitated the accumulation of cultural complexity in humans. Specialization allows populations to increase their cultural repertoire without requiring that members of that population increase their individual capacity to accumulate knowledge. However, specialization also means that domain-specific knowledge can be concentrated in small subsets of the population, making it more susceptible to loss. Here, we use a model of cultural evolution to demonstrate that specialized populations can be more sensitive to stochastic loss of knowledge than populations without subdivision of knowledge, and that demographic and environmental changes have an amplified effect on populations with knowledge specialization. Finally, we suggest that specialization can be a double-edged sword; specialized populations may have an advantage in accumulating cultural traits but may also be less likely to expand and establish themselves successfully in new demes owing to the increased cultural loss that they experience during the population bottlenecks that often characterize such expansions. This article is part of the theme issue 'Human socio-cultural evolution in light of evolutionary transitions'.
人群中知识的专业化转变可能促进了人类文化复杂性的积累。专业化使人群能够在不要求该人群的成员增加其个人知识积累能力的情况下,增加其文化储备。然而,专业化也意味着特定领域的知识可以集中在人群的一小部分中,从而更容易丢失。在这里,我们使用文化进化模型来证明,专业化的人群比没有知识细分的人群更容易受到知识随机丢失的影响,并且人口和环境变化对具有知识专业化的人群有放大效应。最后,我们认为专业化可能是一把双刃剑;专业化的人群在积累文化特征方面可能具有优势,但由于在经常特征为这种扩张的种群瓶颈期间经历的文化损失增加,他们也不太可能在新的小生境中成功扩张和立足。本文是主题为“从进化过渡看人类社会文化进化”特刊的一部分。