4.7 Article

The modularity of a social group does not affect the transmission speed of a novel, socially learned behaviour, or the formation of local variants

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2020.2614

Keywords

social structure; modularity; social transmission

Funding

  1. ERC Consolidator Award [616474]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [616474] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The structure of a group plays a critical role in the spread of socially learnt behavior, with higher modularity potentially slowing the spread of behavior and facilitating the establishment of local cultures. In an experimental study manipulating the modularity of populations of domestic fowl chicks, it was found that modularity did not increase the speed of behavioral spread or lead to the establishment of shared behavioral variants, suggesting that factors beyond network structure may influence behavioral transmission.
The structure of a group is critical in determining how a socially learnt behaviour will spread. Predictions from theoretical models indicate that specific parameters of social structure differentially influence social transmission. Modularity describes how the structure of a group or network is divided into distinct subgroups or clusters. Theoretical modelling indicates that the modularity of a network will predict the rate of behavioural spread within a group, with higher modularity slowing the rate of spread and facilitating the establishment of local behavioural variants which can prelude local cultures. Despite prolific modelling approaches, empirical tests via manipulations of group structure remain scarce. We experimentally manipulated the modularity of populations of domestic fowl chicks, Gallus gallus domesticus, to affect the transmission of a novel foraging behaviour. We compared the spread of behaviour in populations with networks of high or low modularity against control populations where social transmission was prevented. We found the foraging behaviour to spread socially between individuals when the social transmission was permitted; however, modularity did not increase the speed of behavioural spread nor lead to the initial establishments of shared behavioural variants. This result suggests that factors in the social transmission process additional to the network structure may influence behavioural spread.

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