Ratcheting up the ratchet: on the evolution of cumulative culture

Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology

PubMed
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Abstract

Some researchers have claimed that chimpanzee and human culture rest on homologous cognitive and learning mechanisms. While clearly there are some homologous mechanisms, we argue here that there are some different mechanisms at work as well. Chimpanzee cultural traditions represent behavioural biases of different populations, all within the species' existing cognitive repertoire (what we call the 'zone of latent solutions') that are generated by founder effects, individual learning and mostly product-oriented (rather than process-oriented) copying. Human culture, in contrast, has the distinctive characteristic that it accumulates modifications over time (what we call the 'ratchet effect'). This difference…

Citation impact

1,196
total citations
FWCI
32.11
Percentile
100%
References
88
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Social learning
  • Conformity
  • Repertoire
  • Cognition
  • Copying
  • Cultural learning
  • Normative
  • Process (computing)
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