Cooperative breeding and human cognitive evolution
Royal Anthropological Institute · Coherent (United States) · +1 more institution
Abstract
Abstract Despite sharing a recent common ancestor, humans are surprisingly different from other great apes. The most obvious discontinuities are related to our cognitive abilities, including language, but we also have a markedly different, cooperative breeding system. Among many nonhuman primates and mammals in general, cooperative breeding is accompanied by psychological changes leading to greater prosociality, which directly enhances performance in social cognition. Here we propose that these cognitive consequences of cooperative breeding could have become more pervasive in the human lineage because the psychological changes were added to an ape‐level cognitive system capable of understanding simple mental…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.69
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 152
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Cognition
- Prosocial behavior
- Psychology
- Animal cognition
- Cooperative breeding
- Cognitive psychology
- Intentionality
- Human evolution