4.0 Article

Evolutionarily stable learning schedules and cumulative culture in discrete generation models

Journal

THEORETICAL POPULATION BIOLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 4, Pages 300-309

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.tpb.2012.01.006

Keywords

Population genetics; Cumulative culture; Optimal strategy

Funding

  1. Monbukagakusho [22101004]
  2. Swiss NSF [PP00P3-123344]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [22101004] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Individual learning (e.g., trial-and-error) and social learning (e.g., imitation) are alternative ways of acquiring and expressing the appropriate phenotype in an environment. The optimal choice between using individual learning and/or social learning may be dictated by the life-stage or age of an organism. Of special interest is a learning schedule in which social learning precedes individual learning, because such a schedule is apparently a necessary condition for cumulative culture. Assuming two obligatory learning stages per discrete generation, we obtain the evolutionarily stable learning schedules for the three situations where the environment is constant, fluctuates between generations, or fluctuates within generations. During each learning stage, we assume that an organism may target the optimal phenotype in the current environment by individual learning, and/or the mature phenotype of the previous generation by oblique social learning. In the absence of exogenous costs to learning, the evolutionarily stable learning schedules are predicted to be either pure social learning followed by pure individual learning (bang-bang control) or pure individual learning at both stages (flat control). Moreover, we find for each situation that the evolutionarily stable learning schedule is also the one that optimizes the learned phenotype at equilibrium. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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