11 results match your criteria: "Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre[Affiliation]"
Evol Hum Sci
April 2024
Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre, Anthropology Department, Durham DH1 3LE, UK.
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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Brain Sci
January 2024
Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre & Department of Psychology, Durham University, Durham,
In this commentary, we set out the specifics of how Glowacki's game theoretical framework for the evolution of peace could be incorporated within broader cultural evolutionary approaches. We outline a formal proposal for prisoner's dilemma games investigating raid-based conflict. We also centre an ethnographic lens to understand the norms surrounding war and peace in intergroup interactions in small-scale communities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Sci
September 2024
Department of Psychology, Center for Applied Cognitive Science, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA.
Learn Behav
March 2023
Centre for Comparative and Evolutionary Psychology, Psychology Department, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, PO1 2DY, UK.
Male and female human social bonding strategies are culturally shaped, in addition to being genetically rooted. Investigating nonhuman primate bonding strategies across sex groups allows researchers to assess whether, as with humans, they are shaped by the social environment or whether they are genetically predisposed. Studies of wild chimpanzees show that in some communities males have strong bonds with other males, whereas in others, females form particularly strong intrasex bonds, potentially indicative of cultural differences across populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2023
Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre, Department of Anthropology, Durham University, Durham, UK.
Despite playing a pivotal role in the inception of animal culture studies, macaque social learning is surprisingly understudied. Social learning is important to survival and influenced by dominance and affiliation in social animals. Individuals generally rely on social learning when individual learning is costly, and selectively use social learning strategies influencing what is learned and from whom.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Brain Sci
November 2022
Department of Psychology, Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre, Durham University, Durham, DH1 3LE,
The "prescription" of humans' social learning bifocals is fine-tuned by cultural norms and, as a result, the readiness with which the instrumental or conventional lenses are used to view behavior differs across cultures. We present evidence for this possibility from cross-cultural work examining children's imitation and innovation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Nat
September 2022
Department of Cognitive Science, Central European University, Budapest, Hungary.
Image-making is a nearly universal human behavior, yet the visual strategies and conventions to represent things in pictures vary greatly over time and space. In particular, pictorial styles can differ in their degree of figurativeness, varying from intersubjectively recognizable representations of things to very stylized and abstract forms. Are there any patterns to this variability, and what might its ecological causes be? Experimental studies have shown that demography and the structure of interaction of cultural groups can play a key role: the greater the degree of contact with other groups, the more recognizable and less abstract are the representations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Sci
January 2022
Department of Anthropology, Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre, Durham University, UK.
Innovation and social learning are the pillars of cultural evolution, allowing cultural behaviours to cumulatively advance over generations. Yet, little is known about individual differences in the use of social and asocial information. We examined whether personality influenced 7-11-year-old children's (N = 282) propensity to elect to observe others first or independently generate solutions to novel problems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvol Hum Sci
September 2020
Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre, Department of Anthropology, Durham University, UK.
Personality factors analogous to the Big Five observed in humans are present in the great apes. However, few studies have examined the long-term stability of great ape personality, particularly using factor-based personality instruments. Here, we assessed overall group, and individual-level, stability of chimpanzee personality by collecting ratings for chimpanzees ( = 50) and comparing them with ratings collected approximately 10 years previously, using the same personality scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
June 2020
Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre, Department of Anthropology, Durham University, Durham, United Kingdom.
Despite the spectacular success of vaccines in preventing infectious diseases, fears about their safety and other anti-vaccination claims are widespread. To better understand how such fears and claims persist and spread, we must understand how they are perceived and recalled. One influence on the perception and recall of vaccination-related information might be universal cognitive biases acting against vaccination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvol Hum Sci
December 2019
Department Of Anthropology And Durham Cultural Evolution Research Centre, Durham University, Durham, UK.
Forms of non-random copying error provide sources of inherited variation yet their effects on cultural evolutionary dynamics are poorly understood. Focusing on variation in granny and reef knot forms, we present a mathematical model that specifies how these variant frequencies are affected by non-linear interactions between copying fidelity, mirroring, handedness and repetition biases. Experiments on adult humans allowed these effects to be estimated using approximate Bayesian computation and the model is iterated to explain the prevalence of granny over reef knots in the wild.
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