Agent-based models as behavioral laboratories for evolutionary anthropological research

Premo, L. S. (2006) Agent-based models as behavioral laboratories for evolutionary anthropological research. Arizona Anthropologist 17:91-113.

[1]  P. Jeffrey Brantingham,et al.  A Neutral Model of Stone Raw Material Procurement , 2003, American Antiquity.

[2]  G. Price The nature of selection , 1995 .

[3]  Robert Axelrod,et al.  Advancing the art of simulation in the social sciences , 1997, Complex..

[4]  John M. Swales,et al.  Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge , 1999 .

[5]  J. Stephen Lansing,et al.  Artificial Societies and the Social Sciences , 2002, Artificial Life.

[6]  Carol M. Lauer,et al.  Hierarchy in the forest: The evolution of egalitarian behavior , 2001 .

[7]  N. Jones Tolerated theft, suggestions about the ecology and evolution of sharing, hoarding and scrounging: , 1987 .

[8]  Douglas N Gow The crossing. , 2017, The Medical journal of Australia.

[9]  P. Griffiths,et al.  Review: Unto Others: The Evolution and Psychology of Unselfish Behavior , 2002 .

[10]  Timothy A Kohler,et al.  Simulating ancient societies. , 2005, Scientific American.

[11]  N. Waguespack Caribou sharing and storage: refitting the Palangana site , 2002 .

[12]  L. S. Premo,et al.  Patchiness and Prosociality: An Agent-Based Model of Plio/Pleistocene Hominid Food Sharing , 2004, MABS.

[13]  E. Sober,et al.  Reintroducing group selection to the human behavioral sciences , 1994 .

[14]  D. Geraads,et al.  Geological and palaeontological context of a Pliocene juvenile hominin at Dikika, Ethiopia , 2006, Nature.

[15]  Joshua M. Epstein,et al.  Understanding Anasazi culture change through agent-based modeling , 2000 .

[16]  V. Reidhead Linear Programming Models in Archaeology , 1979 .

[17]  L. Binford Searching for Camps and Missing the Evidence , 1987 .

[18]  J. Pepper,et al.  A Mechanism for the Evolution of Altruism among Nonkin: Positive Assortment through Environmental Feedback , 2002, The American Naturalist.

[19]  J. Hailman Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History, Stephen Jay Gould. W. W. Norton, New York (1989), 347, Price $19.95 (U.S.A.), $27.95 (Canada) , 1991 .

[20]  I. Eibl-Eibesfeldt,et al.  Emergency Decisions, Cultural-Selection Mechanics, and Group Selection [and Comments and Reply] , 1996, Current Anthropology.

[21]  J. Pepper,et al.  The evolution of cooperation in an ecological context: an agent based model , 2000 .

[22]  G. Isaac The food-sharing behavior of protohuman hominids. , 1978, Scientific American.

[23]  Timothy A. Kohler,et al.  Be there then: a modeling approach to settlement determinants and spatial efficiency among late ancestral pueblo populations of the Mesa Verde region, U.S. southwest , 2000 .

[24]  N. Jones A selfish origin for human food sharing: Tolerated theft , 1984 .

[25]  George R. Price,et al.  Selection and Covariance , 1970, Nature.

[26]  K. Hawkes,et al.  Male strategies and Plio-Pleistocene archaeology. , 2002, Journal of human evolution.

[27]  M. Nowak,et al.  Evolutionary games and spatial chaos , 1992, Nature.

[28]  Stanley A. Ahler,et al.  Piecing Together the Past: Applications of Refitting Studies in Archaeology , 1992 .

[29]  Joshua M. Epstein,et al.  Growing Artificial Societies: Social Science from the Bottom Up , 1996 .

[30]  I. Mysterud Unto others: The evolution and psychology of unselfish behavior , 1999 .

[31]  Timothy A. Kohler,et al.  Creating Alternative Cultural Histories in the Prehistoric Southwest: Agent-Based Modeling in Archaeology , 1996 .