8 results match your criteria: "777 E. University[Affiliation]"

Norm reinforcement, not conformity or environmental factors, is predicted to sustain cultural variation.

Evol Hum Sci

December 2024

School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, 900 S. Cady Mall, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA.

The maintenance of cross-cultural variation and arbitrary traditions in human populations is a key question in cultural evolution. Conformist transmission, the tendency to follow the majority, was previously considered central to this phenomenon. However, recent theory indicates that cognitive biases can greatly reduce its ability to maintain traditions.

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Predicting the composition of solid waste at the county scale.

Waste Manag

December 2024

Arizona State University, Rob and Melani Walton Sustainability Solutions Service, 777 E. University, Tempe, AZ, 85287, USA. Electronic address:

The primary goals of this paper are to facilitate data-driven decision making in solid waste management (SWM) and to support the transition towards a circular economy, by providing estimates of the composition and quantity of waste. To that end, it introduces a novel two-phase strategy for predicting municipal solid waste (MSW). The first phase predicts the waste composition, the second phase predicts the total quantity, and the two predictions are combined to give a comprehensive waste estimate.

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Environmental complexity and regularity shape the evolution of cognition.

Proc Biol Sci

October 2024

Computational Cognitive Sciences Lab, Department of Computer Science, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA.

The environmental complexity hypothesis suggests that cognition evolves to allow animals to negotiate a complex and changing environment. By contrast, signal detection theory suggests cognition exploits environmental regularities by containing biases (e.g.

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When does metacognition evolve in the opt-out paradigm?

Anim Cogn

October 2024

School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, 900 South Cady Mall, Tempe, AZ, 85287, USA.

Metacognition (awareness of one's own knowledge) is taken for granted in humans, but its evolution in non-human animals is not well understood. While there is experimental evidence of seemingly metacognitive judgements across species, studies rarely focus on why metacognition may have evolved. To address this, I present an evolutionary model of the opt-out paradigm, a common experiment used to assess animal's metacognition.

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The United States' current Seafood Import Monitoring Program (SIMP) and a potential extension are undergoing review, yet quantitative evaluation of the current program is lacking. The SIMP is a traceability program aimed at reducing imports of seafood products that are of illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) origin or associated with seafood fraud. We conducted a quantitative examination of the SIMP's current scope and design by synthesizing publicly available trade data along with measures of IUU fishing and seafood mislabeling.

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While humans are highly cooperative, they can also behave spitefully. Yet spite remains understudied. Spite can be normatively driven and while previous experiments have found some evidence that cooperation and punishment may spread via social learning, no experiments have considered the social transmission of spiteful behaviour.

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Placing diverse knowledge systems at the core of transformative climate research.

Ambio

September 2023

School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, 420 West 118th Street, New York, NY, 10027, USA.

We argue that solutions-based research must avoid treating climate change as a merely technical problem, recognizing instead that it is symptomatic of the history of European and North American colonialism. It must therefore be addressed by decolonizing the research process and transforming relations between scientific expertise and the knowledge systems of Indigenous Peoples and of local communities. Partnership across diverse knowledge systems can be a path to transformative change only if those systems are respected in their entirety, as indivisible cultural wholes of knowledge, practices, values, and worldviews.

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The experimental evolution of human culture: flexibility, fidelity and environmental instability.

Proc Biol Sci

November 2022

Department of Psychology, Princeton University, 320 Peretsman Scully Hall, Princeton, NJ 08540, USA.

The past 2 Myr have seen both unprecedented environmental instability and the evolution of the human capacity for complex culture. This, along with the observation that cultural evolution occurs faster than genetic evolution, has led to the suggestion that culture is an adaptation to an unstable environment. We test this hypothesis by examining the ability of human social learning to respond to environmental changes.

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