The value of teaching increases with tool complexity in cumulative cultural evolution

Human cumulative cultural evolution (CCE) is recognized as a powerful ecological and evolutionary force, but its origins are poorly understood. The long-standing view that CCE requires specialized social learning processes such as teaching has recently come under question, and cannot explain why such processes evolved in the first place. An alternative, but largely untested, hypothesis is that these processes gradually coevolved with an increasing reliance on complex tools. To address this, we used large-scale transmission chain experiments (624 participants), to examine the role of different learning processes in generating cumulative improvements in two tool types of differing complexity. Both tool types increased in efficacy across experimental generations, but teaching only provided an advantage for the more complex tools. Moreover, while the simple tools tended to converge on a common design, the more complex tools maintained a diversity of designs. These findings indicate that the emergence of cumulative culture is not strictly dependent on, but may generate selection for, teaching. As reliance on increasingly complex tools grew, so too would selection for teaching, facilitating the increasingly open-ended evolution of cultural artefacts.

[1]  Yosef Prat,et al.  Cultural transmission in an ever-changing world: trial-and-error copying may be more robust than precise imitation , 2018, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[2]  P. Mitra,et al.  De novo establishment of wild-type song culture in the zebra finch , 2009, Nature.

[3]  C Tennie,et al.  Young children copy cumulative technological design in the absence of action information , 2017, Scientific Reports.

[4]  Simon Kirby,et al.  High-fidelity copying is not necessarily the key to cumulative cultural evolution: a study in monkeys and children , 2019, Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

[5]  K. Vaesen The cognitive bases of human tool use , 2012, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[6]  Hilla Peretz,et al.  The , 1966 .

[7]  Helen Wasielewski Imitation Is Necessary for Cumulative Cultural Evolution in an Unfamiliar, Opaque Task , 2014, Human nature.

[8]  Bernard Wood,et al.  Older than the Oldowan? Rethinking the emergence of hominin tool use , 2003 .

[9]  R Core Team,et al.  R: A language and environment for statistical computing. , 2014 .

[10]  B. Godelle,et al.  SOCIAL LEARNERS REQUIRE PROCESS INFORMATION TO OUTPERFORM INDIVIDUAL LEARNERS , 2013, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[11]  D. Stout,et al.  Evolutionary neuroscience of cumulative culture , 2017, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[12]  Philip A. Stephens,et al.  Model selection and model averaging in behavioural ecology: the utility of the IT-AIC framework , 2010, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.

[13]  D. Biro,et al.  Cumulative culture can emerge from collective intelligence in animal groups , 2017, Nature Communications.

[14]  Alberto Acerbi,et al.  If we are all cultural Darwinians what’s the fuss about? Clarifying recent disagreements in the field of cultural evolution , 2015, Biology & philosophy.

[15]  Christine A Caldwell,et al.  Social Learning Mechanisms and Cumulative Cultural Evolution , 2009, Psychological science.

[16]  C. Caldwell,et al.  Experimental assessment of capacities for cumulative culture: Review and evaluation of methods , 2019, Wiley interdisciplinary reviews. Cognitive science.

[17]  M. Tomasello,et al.  Ratcheting up the ratchet: on the evolution of cumulative culture , 2009, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[18]  Helena Miton,et al.  Cumulative culture in the laboratory: methodological and theoretical challenges , 2018, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[19]  K. Laland,et al.  The evolution of social learning mechanisms and cultural phenomena in group foragers , 2017, BMC Evolutionary Biology.

[20]  Alex Thornton,et al.  Social learning and the development of individual and group behaviour in mammal societies , 2011, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[21]  M. Erpino Evolution teaching. , 1996, Science.

[22]  Luke Rendell,et al.  Social Learning Strategies: Bridge-Building between Fields , 2018, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[23]  B. Galef The question of animal culture , 1992, Human nature.

[24]  P. Richerson,et al.  Why Culture is Common, but Cultural Evolution is Rare , 1996 .

[25]  L. Aplin Culture and cultural evolution in birds: a review of the evidence , 2019, Animal Behaviour.

[26]  A. Mesoudi,et al.  Cumulative Cultural Evolution within Evolving Population Structures , 2020, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[27]  K. Laland,et al.  THE EVOLUTION OF TEACHING , 2011, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[28]  S. Edelman,et al.  The evolution of cognitive mechanisms in response to cultural innovations , 2017, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[29]  A. Hurtado,et al.  The emergence of human uniqueness: Characters underlying behavioral modernity , 2009 .

[30]  C. Heyes Who Knows? Metacognitive Social Learning Strategies , 2016, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[31]  K. Laland The origins of language in teaching , 2016, Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.

[32]  M. Toro,et al.  Cumulative cultural evolution: the role of teaching. , 2014, Journal of theoretical biology.

[33]  E. G. Flynnb,et al.  Cumulative culture and future thinking: Is mental time travel a prerequisite to cumulative cultural evolution? , 2012 .

[34]  Shimon Edelman,et al.  The evolution of the capacity for language: the ecological context and adaptive value of a process of cognitive hijacking , 2018, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[35]  Francis K C Hui,et al.  The arcsine is asinine: the analysis of proportions in ecology. , 2011, Ecology.

[36]  Alex Thornton,et al.  Cognitive requirements of cumulative culture: teaching is useful but not essential , 2015, Scientific Reports.

[37]  Alex Thornton,et al.  What is cumulative cultural evolution? , 2018, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[38]  Derek C. Penn,et al.  Darwin's mistake: Explaining the discontinuity between human and nonhuman minds , 2008, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[39]  S. Pinker The cognitive niche: Coevolution of intelligence, sociality, and language , 2010, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[40]  D. Biro,et al.  Tool use as adaptation , 2013, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[41]  K. Laland,et al.  Experimental Evidence for the Co-Evolution of Hominin Tool-Making Teaching and Language , 2014, Nature Communications.

[42]  Andrew Whiten,et al.  Cultural Evolution in Animals , 2019, Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics.

[43]  Jonathan B. Scholnick,et al.  Risk, mobility or population size? Drivers of technological richness among contact-period western North American hunter–gatherers , 2013, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[44]  G. Csibra,et al.  Natural pedagogy as evolutionary adaptation , 2011, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[45]  F. Osiurak,et al.  The elephant in the room: What matters cognitively in cumulative technological culture , 2019, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[46]  R. Kendal,et al.  Skills and motivations underlying children’s cumulative cultural learning: case not closed , 2020, Palgrave Communications.

[47]  J. Henrich The Secret of Our Success: How Culture Is Driving Human Evolution, Domesticating Our Species, and Making Us Smarter , 2015 .

[48]  A. Thornton,et al.  Supporting the weight of the elephant in the room: Technical intelligence propped up by social cognition and language , 2020, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[49]  H. Fernandes,et al.  Darwin's unfinished symphony: How culture made the human mind Kevin N. Laland Darwin's unfinished symphony: How c , 2017, Animal Behaviour.

[50]  C. Caldwell,et al.  Human Teaching and Cumulative Cultural Evolution , 2017, Review of Philosophy and Psychology.

[51]  Malcolm Correll,et al.  A+ for Teaching , 1962 .

[52]  K. Laland,et al.  Identification of the Social and Cognitive Processes Underlying Human Cumulative Culture , 2012, Science.