4.7 Article

Inferring population histories using cultural data

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 276, Issue 1674, Pages 3835-3843

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2009.1088

Keywords

cultural evolution; founder effect; population genetic; stylistic traits; Polynesian societies; canoe design

Funding

  1. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  2. Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies
  3. John P. Gifford Fund
  4. Mertz Gilmore Foundation
  5. Peter and Helen Bing
  6. NIH [GM 28016]

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The question as to whether cultures evolve in a manner analogous to that of genetic evolution can be addressed by attempting to reconstruct population histories using cultural data. As others have argued, this can only succeed if cultures are isolated enough to maintain and pass on a central core of traditions that can be modified over time. In this study we used a set of cultural data (canoe design traits from Polynesia) to look for the kinds of patterns and relationships normally found in population genetic studies. After developing new techniques to accommodate the peculiarities of cultural data, we were able to infer an ancestral region (Fiji) and a sequence of cultural origins for these Polynesian societies. In addition, we found evidence of cultural exchange, migration and a serial founder effect. Results were stronger when analyses were based on functional traits (presumably subject to natural selection and convergence) rather than symbolic or stylistic traits (probably subject to cultural selection for rapid divergence). These patterns strongly suggest that cultural evolution, while clearly affected by cultural exchange, is also subject to some of the same processes and constraints as genetic evolution.

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