Evolutionary Psychology (6) - Social learning and culture

  1. Environmental opportunity hypothesis
    Less foraging pressure results in modified activity budget which results in more "play"
  2. What caused (many) macaques to begin stone handling?
    Being fed regularly (environmental opportunity hypothesis)
  3. How does stone handling in mothers affect timing of stone handling in offspring?
    • Mothers who exhibit stone handling have children who exhibit it much sooner
    • Implies social learning
  4. What is cultural transmission?
    Affecting behaviour/phenotype by teaching or social learning
  5. What are the two 'actors' needed in cultural transmisison?
    • Model/teacher
    • Observer/learner
  6. Characteristics of cultural transmission
    • Spread of information from individual to individual
    • Information spreads across generations very quickly
  7. What is tradition?
    Emergence and social transmission of a new behaviour in a group
  8. What is a culture?
    Shared characteristics of an entire group, which has been amassed throughout it's history
  9. What is behavioural contagion?
    Automatic, or reflexive behavioural mimicry as a result of empathy/contagion (fitting in)
  10. Examples of social influence
    • Behavioural contagion
    • Social enhancement
  11. Examples of social learning (7)
    • Local enhancement
    • Stimulus enhancment
    • Response facilitation
    • Observational conditioning
    • Imitation
    • Emulation
    • Teaching
  12. What is social enhancement?
    • The presence of another causing an individual to express behaviour
    • Not influenced by the others' actions
  13. What is local enhancement?
    Action of a model individual, focuses attention of an observer who later learns by individual learning
  14. In the following image. When is local ehancement likely?
    Image Upload 2
    When #3 eats much more food than #1 and #2
  15. In the following image. When is social ehancement unlikely?
    Image Upload 4
    When #1 is roughly equal to #2
  16. What is response faciliation?
    Existing behaviour is emitted when others do it
  17. Characteristics of response facilitation
    • No understanding needed
    • Can support additional learning (e.g conditioning to predator stimuli)
  18. Example of response facilitation
    Individual sees a conspecific engaging in an activity and begins performing that same general activity (likely not exactly the same)
  19. What is stimulus enhancement?
    • Activity of a conspecific focuses the subject's attention on a specific type of stimulus
    • Individual learning follows
  20. Difference between local and stimulus enhancement
    • Local enhancement focuses attention on a specific area/location
    • Stimulus enhancement focuses attention on a specific stimulus
  21. What is observational conditioning?
    • When an observer is conditioned by watching a conspecific's reaction to stimulus
    • e.g Lab raised monkeys learning to fear snakes
  22. What is imitation
    • Process-oriented copying
    • Observer replicates exact steps of a demonstrator, to achieve the same goal
  23. What is emulation?
    • Product oriented copying
    • Observer attempts to achieve the same goal as a demonstrator, but uses different steps
    • E.g omitting irrelevant steps
  24. Selective replicators use emulation, or imitation?
    Emulation
  25. Pros of emulation (compared to imitation)
    Less time required to achieve goal
  26. Pros of Imitation
    High fidelity learning (nothing is lost)
  27. Cons of emulation
    Loss of fidelity (information may be lost)
  28. Requirements for direct social learning
    • Presence
    • Observation
    • Interaction
  29. How do black rats learn to open pinecones? What kind of social learning is this?
    • By observing remains of pinecones left by skilled foragers
    • Example of stimulus enhancement (pinecone remains are the stimulus)
  30. Definition of teaching
    A skilled individual modifies it's behaviour in the presence of an observer
  31. Benefits of teaching (from the observer's perspective)
    • Skills are acquired,
    • More rapidly
    • More similarly
    • With higher fidelity/More similarly
  32. What kind of communication does teaching require?
    Two-way communication
  33. Which social learning mechanisms can sustain cultural transmission?
    All of them
  34. Are social and individual learning exclusive?
    • No (not at all)
    • Often individual learning happens after some social learning has taken place
  35. Three cultural transmission pathways
    • Horizontal - Among peers
    • Vertical - Parents to offspring
    • Oblique
  36. What is oblique cultural transmission?
    Learning from more distant group members (i.e not close family, or even family at all)
  37. What is network-based diffusion analysis
    The theory that individuals who spend more time together are more likely to transmit behaviours
  38. What is heterospecific?
    • Members of different species
    • Hetero- Different
    • -specific Species
  39. What is an information center?
    Identifying some reward stimulus by looking for groups of heterospecifics
  40. Define meme
    A cultural trait, capable of being transmitted
  41. How do memes relate to culture?
    Individuals acquire memes (learning) and transmit them (cutlure)
  42. Which type of transmission increases group homogeneity?
    Horizontal
  43. What is group level-selection?
    When organisms fall into groups and natural selection favours some groups over others
  44. What kind of relationship exists between brain size and innovation
    Positive correlation (larger relative brain size means more innovation)
  45. Relationship between behaviour and culture
    Behaviour is what you do, culture is how you learned to do it
  46. Characteristics of culture
    • Culture is the way things are done (for a group)
    • The things not all groups do
    • Culture responds to change
  47. Three ways animals acquire knowledge
    • Genetic/inheritance
    • Individual learning
    • Social learning
  48. Define cumulative culture
    Modification of cultural traits that results in an increase in complexity, diversity or efficiency of the traits
Author
Ant
ID
359815
Card Set
Evolutionary Psychology (6) - Social learning and culture
Description
Updated