Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse, Toulouse School of Economics, 1 Esplanade de l'Université, 31080 Toulouse cedex 06, France.
Sci Adv. 2024 Jan 12;10(2):eadj2543. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.adj2543. Epub 2024 Jan 10.
In hunter-gatherer societies, women's subsistence activities are crucial for food provisioning and children's social learning but are understudied relative to men's activities. To understand the structure of women's foraging networks, we present 230 days of focal-follow data in a BaYaka community. To analyze these data, we develop a stochastic blockmodel for repeat observations with uneven sampling. We find that women's subsistence networks are characterized by cooperation between kin, gender homophily, and mixed age-group composition. During early childhood, individuals preferentially coforage with adult kin, but those in middle childhood and adolescence are likely to coforage with nonkin peers, providing opportunities for horizontal learning. By quantifying the probability of coforaging ties across age classes and relatedness levels, our findings provide insights into the scope for social learning during women's subsistence activities in a real-world foraging population and provide ground-truth values for key parameters used in formal models of cumulative culture.
在狩猎采集社会中,女性的生存活动对于食物供应和儿童的社会学习至关重要,但相对于男性的活动而言,这些活动的研究相对较少。为了了解女性觅食网络的结构,我们在一个巴亚卡社区展示了 230 天的焦点跟随数据。为了分析这些数据,我们开发了一种具有不均匀采样的重复观测的随机块模型。我们发现,女性的生存网络以亲属之间的合作为特征,性别同质性和混合年龄组成。在幼儿期,个体更喜欢与成年亲属一起觅食,但在儿童中期和青春期,他们更有可能与非亲属同龄人一起觅食,为横向学习提供机会。通过量化跨年龄和亲属水平的共同觅食关系的概率,我们的研究结果为现实世界觅食人群中女性生存活动中的社会学习范围提供了深入的了解,并为累积文化的正式模型中使用的关键参数提供了真实值。