Activities per year
Abstract
Culture pervades human life and is at the origin of the success of our species. A wide range of other animals have culture too, but often in a limited form that does not complexify through the gradual accumulation of innovations. We developed a new paradigm to study cultural evolution in primates in order to better evaluate our closest relatives' cultural capacities. Previous studies using transmission chain experimental paradigms, in which the behavioural output of one individual becomes the target behaviour for the next individual in the chain, show that cultural transmission can lead to the progressive emergence of systematically structured behaviours in humans. Inspired by this work, we combined a pattern reproduction task on touch screens with an iterated learning procedure to develop transmission chains of baboons (Papio papio). Using this procedure, we show that baboons can exhibit three fundamental aspects of human cultural evolution: a progressive increase in performance, the emergence of systematic structure and the presence of lineage specificity. Our results shed new light on human uniqueness: we share with our closest relatives essential capacities to produce human-like cultural evolution.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 20141541 |
Pages (from-to) | 1-9 |
Journal | Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences |
Volume | 281 |
Issue number | 1797 |
Early online date | 5 Nov 2014 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 22 Dec 2014 |
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Dive into the research topics of 'Cultural evolution of a systematically structured behaviour in a non-human primate'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Datasets
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Data from: Cultural evolution of systematically structured behaviour in a non-human primate
Claidière, N. (Creator), Smith, K. (Creator), Kirby, S. (Creator) & Fagot, J. (Creator), Dryad, 9 Oct 2014
DOI: 10.5061/dryad.0f1m0
Dataset
Press/Media
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Baboons, like humans, can build on work of others, according to study by Drs Simon Kirby and Kenny Smith
5/11/14 → 15/11/14
17 items of Media coverage, 1 Media contribution
Press/Media: Research
Activities
- 1 Participation in conference
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Interdisciplinary Advances in Statistical Learning
Smith, K. (Participant)
2015Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in conference
Profiles
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Simon Kirby
- School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences - Personal Chair of Language Evolution
Person: Academic: Research Active
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Kenny Smith
- School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences - Personal Chair of Evolutionary Linguistics
Person: Academic: Research Active