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The Mystery of Cumulative Culture

Series
New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution
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Human demographic and ecological success is frequently attributed to our capacity for cumulative culture, which allows human knowledge and technology to build up and improve over time.
Yet it remains a mystery why other animals might possess socially learned traditions but lack this capacity for cumulative cultural knowledge gain. Nor is it immediately apparent what cognitive, social or demographic factors are necessary for accumulation to occur. Here I explore the factors that led to the evolution of the human cultural capability, drawing on a combination of experimental and theoretical approaches. I will present insights from the social learning strategies tournament, and comparative statistical analyses of primate social learning, which together imply that there may have been selection for increasing reliance on social learning, and for increasingly efficient (including higher fidelity) forms of copying, in the primate lineage leading to humans. I will go on to describe mathematical cultural evolution models that suggest that higher fidelity cultural transmission increases the longevity and amount of cultural traits, and that this in turn promotes cumulative cultural learning. I will move on to describe a mathematical model of the evolution of teaching, which is a mechanism for high-fidelity information transmission, which finds that teaching is more likely to evolve in a cumulative, compared to a non-cumulative, cultural learning context, implying that teaching and cumulative culture may have coevolved. Finally, I will present the findings of an experimental study of cumulative cultural learning involving human children, chimpanzees and capuchin monkeys, which implicates specific cognitive factors as central to cumulative learning, including imitation, teaching, language and prosocial behaviour. Presented by Kevin Laland (Biology, University of St Andrews, UK).
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution
People
Kevin Laland
Keywords
anthropology
evolution
cognitve
human
Social Sciences
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 22/08/2011
Duration: 00:54:14

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Cultural Inheritance of Cultural Learning

Series
New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution
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It is widely acknowledged that the cumulative cultural inheritance of technological skills and social practices has played a major role in shaping the ways of life of modern humans.
The term 'cultural learning' refers to the psychological processes that make cultural inheritance possible. Curiously, even those researchers who have been most influential in demonstrating the importance of cultural inheritance emphasise that cultural learning depends on gene-based psychological adaptations. Like Evolutionary Psychologists, they assume that cultural learning is made possible by genetically-evolved, human-specific and domain-specific cognitive processes. I will suggest that these assumptions are not supported by recent research on social learning and imitation, social decision-making, and social motivation. This research raises the possibility that many processes of cultural learning are themselves culturally inherited. It may not only be the grist but also the mills of cultural inheritance that are acquired through social interaction in the course of ontogeny. Presented by Cecilia Heyes (All Souls College, University of Oxford, UK).
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution
People
Cecilia Heyes
Keywords
anthropology
evolution
cognitve
human
Social Sciences
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 22/08/2011
Duration: 00:54:38

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Body Arts: The Panará People

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Pitt Rivers Museum
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Dr Elizabeth Ewart of the University's Institute of Anthropology and Jaanika Vider, a former student, discuss body adornment and identity in Amazonia,.
in particular among the Panará people of Central Brazil whose concepts of personhood and socially 'human' bodies differ from Western ideas.

Episode Information

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Elizabeth Ewart
Jaanika Vider
Keywords
brazil
pitt rivers
anthropology
culture
Amazonia
tribes
identity
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 22/08/2011
Duration: 00:19:21

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Body Arts: Feathers, Beads and Paint

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
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Professor Peter Rivière and Director of the Pitt Rivers Museum, Dr Mike O'Hanlon, discuss decorative applications of feathers, beads and paint to the body,.
drawing on their respective fieldwork in lowland Amazonia in South America and the Highlands of Papua New Guinea.

Episode Information

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Peter Rivière
Mike O'Hanlon
Keywords
brazil
society
anthropology tribes
culture
Amazonia
identity
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 22/08/2011
Duration: 00:15:26

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Body Arts: Scent, Pain and Exchange

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
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Professor Jeremy MacClancy of Oxford Brookes University talks to Helen Hales of the Pitt Rivers Museum about themes including scent and perfume,.
expressions of womanhood among a minority hill tribe in Pakistan, and the role of pain, degradation and empowerment in marking the body.

Episode Information

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Jeremy MacClancy
Helen Hales
Keywords
Pakistan
society
pitt rivers
anthropology
culture
tribes
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 22/08/2011
Duration: 00:13:31

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Body Arts: The Naga People

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
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Dr Vibha Joshi, a specialist in the Naga culture of northeast India, and Julia Nicholson from the Pitt Rivers Museum look at the unique traditions of hair and body ornaments,.
as well as tattooing, among different Naga groups, and discuss the effects of colonisation and Christianity upon their culture.

Episode Information

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Vibha Joshi
Julia Nicholson
Keywords
anthropology
body art
india
pitt rivers
naga
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 22/08/2011
Duration: 00:18:57

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Body Arts: The Experience of Decoration

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
Embed
Professor Howard Morphy of the Australian National University talks to Helen Hales of the Pitt Rivers Museum about the body as a canvas and the internal experience of external decoration, notably in the context of Aboriginal Australia.

Episode Information

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Howard Morphy
Keywords
anthropology
body arts
pitt rivers
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 22/08/2011
Duration: 00:22:57

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Body Arts: The Flexible Body

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
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The Museum's Director, Dr Mike O'Hanlon, and Professor Stanley Ulijaszek from the University's Institute of Anthropology discuss how the body can be shaped both physically and metaphorically and the idea of bodily norms.

Episode Information

Series
Pitt Rivers Museum
People
Mike O'Hanlon
Stanley Ulijaszek
Keywords
anthropology
body arts
pitt rivers
Department: Pitt Rivers Museum
Date Added: 22/08/2011
Duration: 00:19:06

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Welcome and Introduction

Series
New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution
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Introduction to the "New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution" conference.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution
People
Cecilia Heyes
Keywords
anthropology
evolution
cognitve
human
Social Sciences
Department: Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Date Added: 22/08/2011
Duration: 00:04:03

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New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution

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New Thinking: Advances in the Study of Human Cognitive Evolution
An interdisciplinary conference focusing on new ideas and discoveries in research on the evolution of human cognition The conference focuses on genetic, developmental, and socio-cultural processes that have played a particularly significant role in the evolution of human cognition, and on uniquely human cognitive achievements in domains such as causal understanding, language, social learning, theory of mind and meta-cognition.

The event was supported by All Souls College, The British Academy, Guarantors of Brain, and Magdalen College's Calleva Centre, and took place on 23rd and 24th June 2011.

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